It's complicated. We've prototyped on all kinds of VMs including the CVM used 
with ADF mobile and a hacked up Java SE embedded 7. It's a long way from 
prototype to product and as I mentioned on my blog we have not announced any 
plan around SE embedded VM on iOS / Android. But at least we know that our port 
of fx was (mostly) functional and could be successful.

On Jul 5, 2013, at 12:44 PM, Tobias Bley <t...@ultramixer.com> wrote:

> Richard, the question is: Has Oracle a hidden Java8 VM for Android and iOS? 
> Or how do you test your Android and iOS JavaFX implementation???
> 
> 
> Am 05.07.2013 um 16:42 schrieb Richard Bair <richard.b...@oracle.com>:
> 
>> We have implementations for Android and iOS that are both functional on a 
>> Java 8 VM. It looks like, because the iOS one is so closely related to the 
>> Mac build, it was the easiest one to get a build for the open community. 
>> We're working on the Android build scripts. The situation on Android is 
>> exactly the same as iOS -- we're open sourcing the library code, but not a 
>> Java 8 VM. I would expect that if the iOS build on RoboVM works, that the 
>> Android build for RoboVM would also work, but I haven't tried it.
>> 
>> Richard
>> 
>> On Jul 5, 2013, at 5:07 AM, Daniel Zwolenski <zon...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Thanks Niklas - sounds like there's still a bit to do. 
>>> 
>>> I'm still a bit confused though, I thought the JFX team were/are giving us 
>>> a version of jfx that is specifically designed to work on Android but it 
>>> sounds like that's pretty far from the actuality? What will the gradle 
>>> build for android actually give us?
>>> 
>>> I'd be keen to hear from someone on the jfx side on all of this. Is this 
>>> how you planned for your smart device releases to work or has something 
>>> gone wrong in the journey here?
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 05/07/2013, at 9:57 PM, Niklas Therning <nik...@therning.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> <mime-attachment.txt>
> 

Reply via email to