On 3/18/21 6:55 AM, Christian Gagneraud wrote:
On Fri, 19 Mar 2021 at 00:41, Christian Gagneraud <chg...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Thu, 18 Mar 2021 at 03:32, Roland Hughes <rol...@logikalsolutions.com> wrote:
On 3/17/21 6:00 AM, Konrad Rosenbaum wrote:
Out of curiosity: what alternatives are people settling on?
Forgot to mention. Comcast dumped Qt in favor of Webkit some time late
last year. You probably were on the SPAM and phone call list. We all
know just how technical the people pimps put on the phone are, but here
is what they told me.

FUD + death-of-perpetual-license = abandon-Qt
FUD from Qt + FUD from Roland = people getting tired

I'm tired, and looking every single day how to get rid of Qt.
I'm not happy about the situation, but it forces me to rethink.

My main grief is that Qt doesn't seem to care about C++.
What was their last contribution to the standard?

One day, C++ will have introspection, and  it will come from boost, not Qt...
So sad!
Tip to whoever:
Qt = Atlassian.
Expensive stuff for big companies that think you can buy success.

The flaw in that analogy is the big companies are banning Qt's use. The only medical device projects I'm hearing about still using Qt are things that started over a year ago or things being created by very tiny firms. The deep pockets went elsewhere. Konrad and I are just trying to identify where. Qt licensing changes locked Qt out of many lucrative markets.

I concur with your comment on C++. It does feel Qt has abandoned C++. The recent willy-nilly deletion of convenience functions causing thousands of hours of expensive pain for existing products/projects only adds credence to that feeling.

There seems to be a deep religious divide between C++ and Qt and it is over the CoW (Copy on Write) Qt relies on. (Which also means you can't really have exceptions.) On low powered embedded systems with horrible dynamic memory allocation CoW can really save your bacon. I didn't think it made much difference on grid powered desktops, until I stumbled into a situation where it did.

https://www.logikalsolutions.com/wordpress/information-technology/qlist/

Almost 16 minutes to build a QList that Qt built in about half a second.

--

Roland Hughes, President
Logikal Solutions
(630)-205-1593

http://www.theminimumyouneedtoknow.com
http://www.infiniteexposure.net
http://www.johnsmith-book.com
http://www.logikalblog.com
http://www.interestingauthors.com/blog

_______________________________________________
Interest mailing list
Interest@qt-project.org
https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest

Reply via email to