It will spit out a .java-Class which you run through javac and get
bytecode - for robovm this is going to be completely transparent because
it gets a java-class file.

Tom

On 31.07.13 09:57, Niklas Therning wrote:
> Will this converter be able to precompile embedded JavaScript? That
> would be very cool. If I remember correctly Rhino can compile JS to
> bytecode AOT. RoboVM would then be able to compile that bytecode to
> machine code.
> 
> 
> On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 8:28 AM, Tom Schindl
> <tom.schi...@bestsolution.at <mailto:tom.schi...@bestsolution.at>> wrote:
> 
>     I don't think it is a good idea to use fxml on embedded and mobile,
>     we are working on a fxml => java converter so you can add it to your
>     build process.
> 
>     Tom
> 
>     Von meinem iPhone gesendet
> 
>     Am 31.07.2013 um 08:11 schrieb Niklas Therning <nik...@therning.org
>     <mailto:nik...@therning.org>>:
> 
>     >>>> after many days trying to really build iOS apps with JavaFX and
>     RoboVM
>     >> or
>     >>>> Avian I’m very frustrated because of the following things:
>     >>>>
>     >>>> Based on RoboVM, JavaFX on iOS runs unacceptable slow - I don’t
>     know
>     >> the
>     >>>> reason - maybe it’s the rendering model of JavaFX - maybe it’s the
>     >>>> currently unoptimized RoboVM
>     >>>> One big problem of RoboVM is it’s dependence of the Android
>     library, it
>     >>>> does not support the OpenJDK. That’s a big reason for many many
>     >> problems
>     >>>> when using JavaFX. So currently it’s not possible to use fxml files
>     >>>> (FXMLoader) because of the missing Stax xml parser and classes like
>     >>>> XMLInputFactory in the android library…
>     >
>     > There's now a compatibility library for the jfx78 backport which
>     includes
>     > the missing sun.* classes from OpenJDK [1]. So that will not be a
>     problem
>     > when running on RoboVM/Android. Daniel Zwolenski is working on
>     getting this
>     > into Maven which will make it nice and easy to develop with
>     RoboVM+OpenJFX.
>     >
>     > FXMLLoader relies an StAX and the Java Scripting API. Those can
>     both be
>     > made to work on RoboVM/Android. The POM of the compat project [1]
>     contains
>     > optional dependencies on the StAX API and JSR 223 API. For StAX
>     you'll also
>     > need a StAX provider [2][3]. For scripting you'll need a JSR 223
>     > implementation of the scripting language you're using, like Rhino for
>     > JavaScript [4][5]. Please note that I haven't tested FXML but it
>     should
>     > work (in theory at least ;-) ). Please give it a go. It will be a
>     great
>     > blog story if you can make it work on iOS.
>     >
>     > As for the performance issues with RoboVM+OpenJFX: those WILL be
>     addressed!
>     > You can either wait for it to happen or you can help out. One way
>     to do
>     > that would be sample code that exercises the code paths that need
>     to be
>     > optimized (e.g. the button rendering you posted about earlier).
>     Preferably
>     > the sample should run repeatedly without user interaction. You
>     should then
>     > be able to run Apple's Instruments application to profile this
>     sample. This
>     > will help us determine what needs to be optimized.
>     >
>     > /Niklas
>     >
>     > [1] https://github.com/robovm/robovm-jfx78-compat
>     > [2] https://github.com/FasterXML/aalto-xml
>     > [3] http://woodstox.codehaus.org/
>     > [4] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Rhino
>     > [5]
>     >
>     
> https://java.net/projects/scripting/sources/svn/show/trunk/engines/javascript?rev=236
> 
> 

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