On Thu, 24 Aug 2023 at 06:20, Thomas Kellerer wrote:
> Didn't NetBeans drop support for one specific Swing framework?
>
> I think the "Java Swing" project template used that framework, but I can't
> remember the name.
There used to be support for Swing Application Framework (withdrawn
JSR 296),
Neil C Smith schrieb am 23.08.2023 um 21:55:
>
>
> On Wed, 23 Aug 2023, 14:15 Plaza, Rob (JSC-CD111)[KBR Wyle Services,
> LLC], wrote:
>
> My organization uses Netbeans 11.2. Recently we have noticed ...
>
>
> Recently?! Why NetBeans 11.2? That's 4 years old and unsupported.
> There have been 1
On Wed, 23 Aug 2023, 14:15 Plaza, Rob (JSC-CD111)[KBR Wyle Services, LLC],
wrote:
> My organization uses Netbeans 11.2. Recently we have noticed ...
>
Recently?! Why NetBeans 11.2? That's 4 years old and unsupported. There
have been 14 releases since then! And another one in a week or so.
No su
You can choose the 'Java Application' under the Projects.
It is a Java SE application. java swing support is still there including
JDK17.
I have been using Netbeans since version 5, I always have switched to the
next version.
Right now, it is Netbeans 18.
I did not have any issue usi
My organization uses Netbeans 11.2. Recently we have noticed that the NetBeans
"New Project" window no longer has an option to create a new Java Swing
project. Is Netbeans dropping support for Swing? Please tell me what is
happening and what will happen going forward to newer versions of NetBean