On Thu, 24 May 2001, James Leigh wrote:
> from what I have seems is is easy to port from linux -> win32 and very hard
> to port from win32 -> linux.
So the strategy for world domination should be: port apps to win32,
when they get hooked... tell'em the apps run better on the OS they
originally we
http://www.borland.com/kylix/
that my first thought, although you would be developing in Pascal, a c++
version is "on the way".
gtk is ported to win32, so is gnome:
http://www.gtk.org/
http://www.gtlinc.com/gnome.html
http://www.gtlinc.com/uwin.html
from what I have seems is is easy to port from
http://gcc.gnu.org
--- Karl Philipp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> >I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform
> system.
> >Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's
> (libraries) to use? I'd like to
> >develop applications for linux(es), unix(es) and
> windows.
> >I'm even about to pay
Hi,
I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
develop applications for linux(es), unix(es) and windows.
I'm even about to pay a little amount of money for it.
Oh, I'm talking about GUI objects ( I think C++ w
On Thu, 17 May 2001, Preben Randhol wrote:
> > I think that well written C code is portable. Many projects deve
> > loped under GPL proove it.
>
> No it is not. Count the #ifdefs
#ifdefs are not used only to make sources portable, but also to
make it possible to not compile functionality which
Andrzej Swedrzynski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 17/05/2001 (11:01) :
> On Wed, 16 May 2001, Preben Randhol wrote:
>
> I think that well written C code is portable. Many projects deve
> loped under GPL proove it.
No it is not. Count the #ifdefs
> > object-oriented general purpose programming
>
On Wed, 16 May 2001, Preben Randhol wrote:
> I recommend that you use Ada 95 and GtkAda.
Yes, Ada 95 is a nice language.
> The app I'm developing just
> needed to be compiled under Windows to work. It is being developed under
> Linux of course. Ada 95 is highly portable. C and C++ are not.
I th
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/05/2001 (23:54) :
> I'm intending to develop mostly base and client-server software. So, Java
> won't fit.
Ada 95 would fit very nice then.
--
Preben Randhol --- http://www.pvv.org/~randhol/ --
«For me, Ada95 puts back the joy in prog
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/05/2001 (23:54) :
>
> Hello, debian users.
> I have a question not so specific to debian, but I'm sure you can help me.
>
> I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
> Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
> develop ap
On Wed, May 30, 2001 at 01:33:48PM -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hello, debian users.
> I have a question not so specific to debian, but I'm sure you can help me.
>
> I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
> Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd l
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
> Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
> develop applications for linux(es), unix(es) and windows.
> I'm even about to pay a little amount of money for it.
Why don't you give Ada
On Wed, 30 May 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Well, I think qt is the better choice. I didn't realize there was an
> windows version.
> I'm intending to develop mostly base and client-server software. So, Java
> won't fit.
It didn't get mentioned, but there are Python bindings for Qt -- PyQt.
-
Well, I think qt is the better choice. I didn't realize there was an
windows version.
I'm intending to develop mostly base and client-server software. So, Java
won't fit.
Thanks, all.
Eric
- Portable C++ GUI toolkits
* wxWindows (wxwindows.org)
* QT (trolltech.com)
- Python
* wxPython (wxpython.org)
* Tk (python.org, activestate.com)
* jython (Python implemented in Java with access to all of Java classes)
(jython.org)
- Tcl
* Tcl/Tk (scriptics.com?)
- Java
* JDK (jav
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hello, debian users.
> I have a question not so specific to debian, but I'm sure you can help me.
>
> I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
> Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
> develop applications for linux(es
On Wed, 30 May 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hello, debian users.
> I have a question not so specific to debian, but I'm sure you can help me.
>
> I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
> Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
> develop applic
Hi Romeu,
there are a plenty of options.
Search for FLTK, gtk, Qt homepages in google.
There are other gui out there.
Have a nice day,Paulo Henrique
Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>
> Hello, debian users.
> I have a question n
Hello, debian users.
I have a question not so specific to debian, but I'm sure you can help me.
I'm in the need of developing a multi-platform system.
Can anyone give me a hint of which tool's (libraries) to use? I'd like to
develop applications for linux(es), unix(es) and windows.
I'm even about
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