On Oct 17, 2005, at 12:19 PM, Kenneth McDonald wrote: > Web interfaces are missing a lot more than this. Here are just a > few things that cannot be done with web-based interfaces (correct > me where I'm wrong): > > 1) A real word processor. > 2) Keybindings in a web application > 3) Drag and drop > 4) Resizable windows (i.e. not the browser window) within the > application. > 5) Anything other than absolutely trivial graphical programs. > > State is a very small part of the whole thing. Progress is being > made, but web interfaces are still basically forms that can contain > buttons, checkboxes, text fields, and a few other basic controls. I > wish it were otherwise.
Drag-and-drop within a page can be done. Drag-and-drop between pages is the only thing on that list I think is outright impossible. Everything else is a matter of overcoming difficulty (well, 5 might be close enough to qualify as impossible, if you're thinking Photoshop.) Thing is, as Web applications continue to increase in complexity, they're going to resemble desktop apps more and more, not just on the front end but in back as well. So the "advantage" of Web apps being simpler to program will probably go away. Right now, they're only simpler because people are doing simpler things with them (and browsers only let you do so much.) The extra complexity you get with desktop app toolkits is overkill for many purposes. HTML is often "good enough" in a lot less time. But if we get to the point where browsers are implementing inter-page drag-and-drop (probably differently!) and so forth, some of us might well decide it's simpler to go back to wxPython, etc. Then again, maybe we'll live to see the W3C standardize the desktop environment... <g> -Jason -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
