greg wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > wxWidgets will give you native looking apps on both Linux and Windows > > Well, maybe. There's more to getting a native feel than > just using the right widgets. I once saw a Qt-based app on > MacOSX that had tiny little buttons that were too small > for the text they contained -- Aqua buttons just don't > scale down like that. :-(
wxWidgets isn't Qt-related. wx wraps the Aqua widgets on MacOS, the gtk widgets on Linux, and the Windows widgets on Windows. So you're actually using the real platform-specific widgets, and if you follow the style guidelines you'll get pretty native-looking apps (including things like the menubar showing up in the app on Linux/Windows but using the main menubar on Mac). Last I looked (3.1-ish), Qt didn't use the Aqua widgets but rather tried to write their own widgets that looked (kinda) like the MacOS widgets. I hear that may have changed in more recent versions, but I no longer have a Mac. They did do the menubar correctly even at that time, though. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list