I had a look — running it on Safari/OSX/High Sierra.

it started fast and seemed responsive.

I couldn’t get it to start a SQL query session to put in some query to see how 
that went, bu I did click on a bunch of other things and it seemed very 
responsive.. which is what you want to know.

I was able to put the URL into another tab and have two copies running.  that 
was easy enough.


Without a bunch of hoopla, I couldn’t get it to run in firefox or chrome to see 
how that might run.


and it seems like it needs to be started from the app —  as I couldn’t just 
stick the URL into second browser.



the end goal — is use the browser.

I”m not sure if that means I’ll be able to bookmark the URL and then just use 
it locally.   if so… that might be nice.

and getting a SQL session in another browser applicaiton .. that would be good 
too.


just my thoughts.


Doug Easterbrook
Arts Management Systems Ltd.
mailto:d...@artsman.com
http://www.artsman.com
Phone (403) 650-1978




see you at the third annual users conference
https://tickets.proctors.org/TheatreManager/95/online?performance=29086 
<https://tickets.proctors.org/TheatreManager/95/online?performance=29086>

> On Jan 23, 2018, at 7:48 AM, Dave Page <dp...@pgadmin.org> wrote:
> 
> All,
> 
> As you may know, the most troublesome part of pgAdmin 4 has been the desktop 
> runtime application, which has relied on QtWebKit and QtWebEngine (of various 
> origins and versions) to render the UI as part of the Qt framework.
> 
> This has caused performance issues, rendering issues with remote desktop 
> sessions, keyboard navigation issues and more. It probably accounts for 25% 
> or more of the bugs reports we deal with.
> 
> Unfortunately, whilst there are alternatives to Qt for this purpose, none 
> that we've found are mature enough for our purposes, and would require a 
> significant amount of effort to add the features we would need to support 
> pgAdmin.
> 
> I've therefore been experimenting with another approach in which pgAdmin is 
> rendered in a regular web browser when running in desktop mode. Like some 
> other similar applications, a server process is launched and lives in the 
> system tray, from where it can be shutdown at any time, or new windows 
> opened. When it is first started, it will launch a browser window to render 
> pgAdmin automatically. If additional instances are launched, the previously 
> running instance will be re-used to avoid wasting resources.
> 
> This is a proof of concept at the moment, for which I would appreciate any 
> feedback. Windows and Mac builds can be found here:
> 
> https://developer.pgadmin.org/~dpage/runtime-revamp/ 
> <https://developer.pgadmin.org/~dpage/runtime-revamp/>
> 
> and the GIT branch can be found here:
> 
> https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=pgadmin4.git;a=shortlog;h=refs/heads/runtime-revamp
>  
> <https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=pgadmin4.git;a=shortlog;h=refs/heads/runtime-revamp>
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> --
> Dave Page
> Blog: http://pgsnake.blogspot.com <http://pgsnake.blogspot.com/>
> Twitter: @pgsnake
> 
> EnterpriseDB UK: http://www.enterprisedb.com <http://www.enterprisedb.com/>
> The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company

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