On 09/08/2019 8:40 am, Anthony Walter via lazarus wrote:
> Here is a brief video demonstration:
I know nothing about Scrabble, but as a seasoned visual component
developer I can see a lot of effort went into that. Well done!
Regards,
Graeme
--
fpGUI Toolkit - a cross-platform GUI toolkit
On 09/08/2019 1:50 pm, Anthony Walter via lazarus wrote:
> but perhaps someday someone
> might want to remake a new non Delphi compatible library from scratch for
> FPC and carry forward with this idea.
Such libraries already exist. eg: fpGUI Toolkit and MSEide+MSEgui. Feel
free to experiment
The WS classes are very difficult to work with IMO. I've used them and they
are just messy, as in difficult and not exactly straight forward or
intuitive. I'd have to look them over again to put my finger on exactly
what's hard to use about them, but I distinctly remember having unnecessary
Marc,
I can completely understand how it evolved, and early on the features of
both the Free Pascal language, and the way the LCL library were to be
adapted to multiple platforms became more clear. Thanks for your hard work.
I've thought about the way the LCL is structured to handle many
Anthony Walter via lazarus wrote:
While demonstrating objects to kids in my computer programming classes
for kids this summer, I wrote a Scrabble board game control. It's on
Github right now released under the LGPL.
Here is a brief video demonstration:
On Fri, 9 Aug 2019, Anthony Walter via lazarus wrote:
While demonstrating objects to kids in my computer programming classes for
kids this summer, I wrote a Scrabble board game control. It's on Github
right now released under the LGPL.
Here is a brief video demonstration:
While demonstrating objects to kids in my computer programming classes for
kids this summer, I wrote a Scrabble board game control. It's on Github
right now released under the LGPL.
Here is a brief video demonstration:
https://cache.getlazarus.org/videos/scrabble.mp4
The Github page for this
Ryan, that is a good idea and I can absolutely add a search page that pulls
a string from RESTful query string and returns a friendly hyperlinked
summary of the most useful results. Also, I don't know if you know this,
but you can edit Lazarus settings to open up https://docs.getlazarus.org to
the