Brandon J. Van Every scripsit: > Well, that's the thing though. You imagine your needs are simple, and > so does the next guy, and so does the next guy. But you don't have the > same needs, and pretty soon you've reinvented the mother of all GUIs. > With all the bugs. What's magical about your basic layer that it won't > succumb to Second System Syndrome?
It's worse than that. Open-source developers consciously or unconsciously are drawn to projects with an active bug-fixing community, which is facilitated by large systems with thousands of bugs. As the bugs get fixed, new features are installed, which creates more bugs, which creates more buzz. And so on. If you want a small stable toolkit, use Tk. It's not sexy and earlier versions didn't have native L&F, but it works. Best yet, we already have an egg for it. -- John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://ccil.org/~cowan I must confess that I have very little notion of what [s. 4 of the British Trade Marks Act, 1938] is intended to convey, and particularly the sentence of 253 words, as I make them, which constitutes sub-section 1. I doubt if the entire statute book could be successfully searched for a sentence of equal length which is of more fuliginous obscurity. --MacKinnon LJ, 1940 _______________________________________________ Chicken-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/chicken-users
