As far as I know there's no "Qt in a browser window" stack. So if Flexx is a 
Python event callback style interface that renders in a browser, it could be a 
useful start.  Because it would allow the Python interpreter to be in one place 
(your home / office / cloud) and the browser to be wherever you are (phone, 
shared computer, etc.).
I didn't see the two most important widgets, tree and text editor, in the Flexx 
demos, but not sure if they're in Phosphor?  If that's even relevant?  The 
JupyterLab demo looked pretty good.
Cheers -Terry
 
      From: Edward K. Ream <[email protected]>
 To: leo-editor <[email protected]> 
 Sent: Monday, November 14, 2016 1:30 PM
 Subject: Re: Python Anywhere
   


On Sun, Nov 13, 2016 at 12:39 PM, john lunzer <[email protected]> wrote:


In this way you could host your Leo from your home/work computer or a cloud 
instance. The thought of this is pretty exciting to me.


​I'm trying to understand what the benefits are.  If only the gui changes, Leo 
will still be tied to a traditional platform.  Why would we prefer the Flexx 
rendering to the Qt rendering?

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