laplacia...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> For applications installing the full wxWidgets or Qt toolkits would be
>> less disk space and dependcies than OceanGUI
>
>What? Qt and wX are *huge* compared to OcempGUI.
Well, not compared to OcempGUI + SDL + PyGame. Note that I'm not trying to
run down the prod
On Feb 17, 1:21 am, Python Nutter wrote:
> > Note: spelling is "OcempGUI". Also, since google broke some of the
> > links,
> > here's that main link again:
>
> Thats my bad or more to the point my iPhone bad, typing fast with
> spellcheck changes words to real dictionary words.
>
> > Well, to be f
> Note: spelling is "OcempGUI". Also, since google broke some of the
> links,
> here's that main link again:
Thats my bad or more to the point my iPhone bad, typing fast with
spellcheck changes words to real dictionary words.
> Well, to be fair, SDL is pretty commonly-used software and they offe
> Interesting! One of the commercial apps I'm involved (C++ not python)
> in uses SDL as its GUI with windows etc built on top of it. It means
> that it looks exactly the same on all supported platforms and since it
> usually runs full screen that is fine. I imagine this GUI toolkit
> fits the s
On Feb 16, 4:31 pm, Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
>
> Interesting! One of the commercial apps I'm involved (C++ not python)
> in uses SDL as its GUI with windows etc built on top of it. It means
> that it looks exactly the same on all supported platforms and since it
> usually runs full screen that is
laplacia...@gmail.com wrote:
> I think I just found the GUI toolkit for Python I've been searching
> for. It seems to meet all of the following requirements:
>
>* free software
>* small (I don't need batteries -- Python already comes with those.)
>* easy to use
>* actively maint
> FWIW (and servers set aside, of course), I can hardly remember of any of
> linux box I worked one not having both GTK and KDE installed.
I don't think that those netbooks come with Qt. And for a Windows
installer, where one may want to package the toolkit with the program,
a small toolkit may be
laplacia...@gmail.com a écrit :
On Feb 16, 1:52 pm, Dotan Cohen wrote:
Don't forget that many people will already have Qt already installed,
such as KDE users, or those who use Skype, Google Earth, or Opera.
Though KDE's Qt will likely be accessibily installed in a convinient
place, though, I'm
On Feb 16, 1:52 pm, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>
> Don't forget that many people will already have Qt already installed,
> such as KDE users, or those who use Skype, Google Earth, or Opera.
> Though KDE's Qt will likely be accessibily installed in a convinient
> place, though, I'm not so sure about those
>> For applications installing the full wxWidgets or Qt toolkits would be
>> less disk space and dependcies than OceanGUI
>
> What? Qt and wX are *huge* compared to OcempGUI.
>
Don't forget that many people will already have Qt already installed,
such as KDE users, or those who use Skype, Google E
On Feb 16, 2:34 am, Python Nutter wrote:
> Had a look and it is still under my radar unfortunately because of
> TkInter. OceanGUI
Note: spelling is "OcempGUI". Also, since google broke some of the
links,
here's that main link again:
http://ocemp.sourceforge.net/gui.html
> has a lot of large dec
Had a look and it is still under my radar unfortunately because of
TkInter. OceanGUI has a lot of large decencies (Pygame, SDL libraries,
PyObjC, etc.) to install on my system to just to get a GUI thats no
better loking than TkInter which comes pre-installed (no dependencies)
on most every major pl
I think I just found the GUI toolkit for Python I've been searching
for. It seems to meet all of the following requirements:
* free software
* small (I don't need batteries -- Python already comes with those.)
* easy to use
* actively maintained
* cross-platform
* easy to install
* b
13 matches
Mail list logo