Thank you Konrad,
useful thoughts.
Best,
Marco Piccolino
2017-05-17 11:50 GMT+02:00 Konrad Rosenbaum :
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, May 17, 2017 07:56, Marco Piccolino wrote:
> > In what scenarios would it still make sense to use QtWidgets for new
> > projects?
>
> First off: both technologies are fully su
> On 17 May 2017, at 18:45, Benjamin TERRIER wrote:
>
> 2017-05-17 18:14 GMT+02:00 Jérôme Godbout :
>> I don't say all desktop application should be done into Qml, but just that
>> it's doable into Qml no matter the application you have.
>
> No, it is not always doable.
>
> Let's say I want to
2017-05-17 18:14 GMT+02:00 Jérôme Godbout :
> I don't say all desktop application should be done into Qml, but just that
> it's doable into Qml no matter the application you have.
No, it is not always doable.
Let's say I want to make a desktop app that looks native.
If I want to do it with QtQuic
We went down the Qml road for 3D CAD application and it's doable, you only
need to make a good 3D render to texture view elements until the 3D can
catch up. With Canvas and render to a texture I don't see any real
limitation. Maybe the boilers plate is increase compare to QWidgets but
still doable.
It's not tomorrow that you will design an airplane on an Android
tablet, control the CERN particle accelerator from a Windows phone or
monitor the country electricity distribution network grid from an
Apple iPod.
Well said! Hear! Hear!
Bill
(Oh, damn. Where was that closest Starbucks again.
On 17 May 2017 at 21:12, Till Oliver Knoll wrote:
>
>
> Am 17.05.2017 um 03:14 schrieb Tuukka Turunen :
>
>
>
> Hi,
>
>
>
> If you make a desktop application widgets are often a solid choice –
> especially if you want the application to look like other apps in that OS
> and not create your own sty
On 05/17/2017 12:12 PM, Till Oliver Knoll wrote:
The good thing: you can easily "mix" those technologies.
I thought that too, but it turned out it's not possible where it
mattered the most: Android.
I wanted to replace *some* widgets with QML on Android, but it's not
possible. You have to p
Hi,
On Wed, May 17, 2017 07:56, Marco Piccolino wrote:
> In what scenarios would it still make sense to use QtWidgets for new
> projects?
First off: both technologies are fully supported. Widgets are not obsolete.
It depends on your target platform and target audience:
App for mobile phones or
> Am 17.05.2017 um 03:14 schrieb Tuukka Turunen :
>
>
> Hi,
>
> If you make a desktop application widgets are often a solid choice –
> especially if you want the application to look like other apps in that OS and
> not create your own style for the app. Qt Creator, for example, is an
> ap
;
> Yours,
>
>
>
> Tuukka
>
>
>
>
>
> *From: *Interest
> on behalf of Marco Piccolino
> *Date: *Wednesday, 17 May 2017 at 8.56
> *To: *"interest@qt-project.org"
> *Subject: *[Interest] Using Widgets for new projects
&
t.org"
Subject: [Interest] Using Widgets for new projects
In what scenarios would it still make sense to use QtWidgets for new projects?
Thanks
Marco Piccolino
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In what scenarios would it still make sense to use QtWidgets for new
projects?
Thanks
Marco Piccolino
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Interest@qt-project.org
http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest
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