You will find the two OpenJFX Gluon Maven archetypes around midway down the
list in “Java with Maven”. They can be run and debugged out of the box and
there is nothing you need to install for this.

Gj

On Thu, 25 Jun 2020 at 17:12, Geertjan Wielenga <geert...@apache.org> wrote:

>
> It is also available under “Java with Maven”.
>
> Gj
>
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2020 at 17:11, slipbits <slipb...@slipbits.com> wrote:
>
>> Can't do it (different idea then "won't do it"). JavaFX  seems to be
>> exclusively available under Ant. In order to create a new JavaFX project I
>> must do: Files->New Project->Java with Ant->JavaFX. This is on both NB
>> 12 and OpenBeans.
>>
>> art
>> On 6/24/2020 8:20 PM, Geertjan Wielenga wrote:
>>
>> Can you consider using Maven instead of Ant? Then everything works out of
>> the box.
>>
>> Gj
>>
>> On Thu, 25 Jun 2020 at 01:59, slipbits <slipb...@slipbits.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Win 10-64
>>>
>>> I've installed the JavaFX plugins and now I'm trying to create an
>>> application.  When I do:
>>>
>>> File->New Projects->Java with Ant->JavaFX->JavaFX Application
>>>
>>> I get a message: "Failed to automatically set-up a JavaFX Platform.
>>> Please go to Platform Manager, create a non-default Java SE platform, then 
>>> go to the JavaFX tab,
>>> enable JavaFX and fill in the paths to valid JavaFX SDK and JavaFX Runtime.
>>> Note: JavaFX SDK can be downloaded from JavaFX website."
>>>
>>> Using "Manage Platforms" I have set up a non-default Java SE Platform.
>>> There is no JavaFX tab in the Java Platforms pop-up.  I'm stumped.
>>>
>>> I did get it going (somehow) on my Win-7 system.
>>>
>>> Where is the "JavaFX tab"?
>>>
>>

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