My thought is that JavaFX is perfect for an IDE targeted to education, like 
Greenfoot and BlueJ:

        SnapCode: SnapCode is the first and only pure JavaFX IDE
        YouTube Overview: SnapCode JavaFX Overview

SnapCode has visual code editing ("Snap-coding"), a sprite kit, graphics/sound 
editing, a runtime browser/player with animated transitions and more. It also 
has most of the features you expect in a modern IDE. Hopefully this is a great 
way to attract a new generation of developers and bring JavaFX to all Java 
developers.

What it doesn't have is very much in the way of resources. If anyone wants to 
help, let me know. If Oracle would like to kick in an engineer or a few 
dollars, I wouldn't turn that away either.

We need something like a "JavaFX Playground" before Apple Swift-boat's us. :-)

jeff


On Jul 9, 2014, at 8:29 AM, Michael Berry <mj...@kent.ac.uk> wrote:

> It would be nice in a utopian sense - though I'd have to question if it
> would really be worth the resources required?
> 
> Personally I'd be much more in favour of further development of JavaFX
> itself...
> 
> Michael
> 
> 
> On 9 July 2014 10:52, Tobias Bley <t...@ultramixer.com> wrote:
> 
>> very interesting question ;)
>> 
>> Will there be a android and iOS version of Netbeans in the future ;)?
>> 
>> 
>>> Am 09.07.2014 um 11:40 schrieb Robert Krüger <krue...@lesspain.de>:
>>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> it is a little off-topic but the people reading this list are most
>>> likely the ones who could answer this.
>>> 
>>> Is a port of Netbeans to JFX planned or even ongoing? It would
>>> certainly be a huge project but I am asking myself, if there is a way
>>> around that with Swing being de-facto legacy if Netbeans isn't dropped
>>> as a whole. It would certainly demonstrate Oracle's commitment to JFX
>>> as the future for Desktop UIs and would surely help the maturity of
>>> JFX which IMHO needs tons of real-world apps to be thrown at it.
>>> 
>>> I would not be surprised not to get an answer for all sorts of
>>> understandable reasons but I thought I'd give it a shot anyway.
>>> 
>>> Best regards,
>>> 
>>> Robert
>> 
>> 

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