With GWT 1.5 now officially out, we're pleased to announce a new drop of the
GWT Incubator with 1.5 specific features.
A special thanks to the great group of engineers outside of Google who have
contributed to the project including Ray Cromwell, Jason Essington, Daniel
Florey, and Fred Sauer.
 Widgets

There are a variety of small widgets percolating in incubator right now

   - 
DatePicker<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/DatePicker>,
   a fully internationalized and extensible date picking widget
   - 
GlassPanel<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/GlassPanel>,
   produces a translucent effect around UI components, useful to indicate
   currently non-interactive components
   - 
FastTree<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/FastTree>,
   a fully customizable tree with a rich event mode
   - 
SliderBar<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/SliderBar>
   
/ProgressBar<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/ProgressBar>
   /Spinner<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/Spinner>,
   a set of really useful widgets to add pizazz to your project

 Tables

The table 
suite<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/Tables>provides
performance and functionality to tables

   - Bulk rendering of tables(up to 10x faster than normal rendering)
   - Scrolling tables, where the footer and header are fixed
   - Paging tables, where the table can page through arbitrary data sets
   - Editable tables, complete with common cell editors

 Logging

The GWT logging
suite<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/Logging>adds
additional logging capabilities

   - Logging levels based on the Java logging system
   - Categories and filters to narrow logging output
   - A native Java mode for shared code, where the output can be integrated
   with your server logging system
   - Compilation options so logging can be completely removed or minimally
   included for production mode
   - A variety of logging handlers that output to everything from Firebug to
   a GWT tree widget

 CSS support

CssResource<http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit-incubator/wiki/CssResource>enables
your
css source files to be fully commented and modularized without a performance
hit. For those of you that use css heavily, you know the trade-offs between
readable/modular css and css that is efficient to download, and will want to
give this a spin.

   - Strips CSS of comments and white space
   - Aggregates CSS into a single html file
   - (And in an advanced configuration)
      - Obfucates css style names
      - Eliminates unused css rules
      - Selectively applies rules per browser

 Graphics

Vector graphics have also made their way to the GWT Incubator. The GWTCanvas
Widget exposes an API for drawing and transforming shapes and images, as
well as for defining paths to create custom shapes.

   - Rotations, scales, and translation
   - Custom paths including arcs, lines and curve
   - Image drawing and transformations
   - Compositing operations and transparency


-- 
"There are only 10 types of people in the world: Those who understand
binary, and those who don't"

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