On 02/22/2018 07:24 PM, Thorsten Behrens wrote:
Stephan Bergmann wrote:
Most likely, yes. That LO-in-Java-window thing is brittle at best.
Mmmh - so we have that working in production for a few clients, though
for Windows.
Yes, the example works perfectly on Windows. I have to support both
Stephan Bergmann wrote:
> Most likely, yes. That LO-in-Java-window thing is brittle at best.
>
Mmmh - so we have that working in production for a few clients, though
for Windows.
LOKit is fine, just it should be noted that ~all UI [1] and
interaction then needs to be implemented client-side.
On 22.02.2018 14:14, Robert Marcano wrote:
On 02/22/2018 07:10 AM, Michael Stahl wrote:
On 21.02.2018 16:55, Robert Marcano wrote:
3- Now both processes should be using GTK2, but the problems with
keyboard input is a blocker
that sounds like a bug somewhere. (unlikely to get fixed any time
Thanks for replying.
On 02/22/2018 07:10 AM, Michael Stahl wrote:
On 21.02.2018 16:55, Robert Marcano wrote:
Greetings. I have been playing with the developers guide example [1] for
embedding LO inside a Java window (Swing toolkit). The example works on
a Windows host, but on Linux I found the
On 21.02.2018 16:55, Robert Marcano wrote:
> Greetings. I have been playing with the developers guide example [1] for
> embedding LO inside a Java window (Swing toolkit). The example works on
> a Windows host, but on Linux I found the following problems (in the
> order I found)
>
> 1- When the
Greetings. I have been playing with the developers guide example [1] for
embedding LO inside a Java window (Swing toolkit). The example works on
a Windows host, but on Linux I found the following problems (in the
order I found)
1- When the host Java application is running on a Wayland session