This. (What Bob said, but I would carry it to another level.)
Its a toolbox. Use the tool for the job. Often its Qt, but I once worked on
a team that was mandated to create a UI that would work on Windows, OSX,
Gnome, and KDE. And the client wanted minimal third party and external
tools. The solut
I can tell you all from direct experience Agile is not a one-size-fits-all
tool. Its a tool, best used in mid-sized to larger organizations trying to
build software. Its not at all appropriate for smaller shops. Kanban works
just fine in those.
On Tue, Oct 4, 2016 at 8:02 AM, Ronan Jouchet <
ronan
etc.
> The fact that the backends are all native counts for a lot.
>
>
> *Sent:* Tuesday, July 07, 2015 at 4:44 PM
> *From:* "Tim O'Neil"
> *To:* jh...@gmx.com, interest@qt-project.org
>
> *Subject:* Re: [Interest] Indie Mobil Program terminated?
> >&g
>>No, Qt performs the best, IMHO.
NO, it does NOT. The only thing Qt has going for it is ability to come very
close (not quite exactly, but close) to true x-platform compatibility.
Don't get caught up in some performance thing (did you actually mean
cross-platform performance?) because YOU WILL LO
That is the very deffinition of 'difficult', no? The solution i found may
be a work around for the c++ version issues.
On Mar 25, 2015 7:45 PM, "Thiago Macieira"
wrote:
> On Wednesday 25 March 2015 18:08:12 Tim O'Neil wrote:
> > Qmake with clang is possble,
Qmake with clang is possble, but its not easy; ths is a possble solution:
https://forum.qt.io/topic/19067/solved-using-qtcreator-qmake-with-clang-libclangtooling
On Mar 25, 2015 9:58 AM, "Thiago Macieira"
wrote:
> On Wednesday 25 March 2015 14:46:52 Wilhelm wrote:
> > As you can see running qmake