Hi,
It is interesting to read all these different opinions on qooxdoo.
So, I am adding mine here too.
When I was looking for a framework for building an interactive
web-interface, I did quite some research on the available tools,
libraries and projects out there. I finally decided to use qooxdoo,
because its web-presentation was looking developer-friendly:
1. Online example were available
2. Online docs and API reference were easy to find
3. There was the playground and an active mailing-list
4. The project looked 'alive'
I still find the online examples pretty neat and the online API
reference is pretty nice. Of course, the actual documentation is
pretty thin, but the playground and straightforward
class-/method-names make up for that really.
The playground is a master-piece, since it enables developers to
share code so easily. It is amazing how simple it is to post a link to
a playground with this or that problem, knowing that another developer
will exactly see the issue at hand.
qooxdoo is not perfect, but it is very easy to use and very powerful
in itself. So far, I am not frustrated at all. As for the themes,
perhaps there could be more. On the other hand, I like to customise my
interface myself and the excellent theming support in qooxdoo lets me
do this within minutes too.
Joachim
--
B.1079 Michael Smith Building
Faculty of Life Sciences
The University of Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester
M13 9PT
United Kingdom
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate
GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the
lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win:
http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo
_______________________________________________
qooxdoo-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/qooxdoo-devel