"Asger K. Alstrup Nielsen" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
portable to OS/2 PM. How do you estimate Abiword toolkit (abi/src/af/)?
I don't know the Abiword toolkit. Do you have a link?
Please look at "af" directory of Abiword source. It contains an
abstraction
of the event handling, the font
"Asger K. Alstrup Nielsen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > portable to OS/2 PM. How do you estimate Abiword toolkit (abi/src/af/)?
>
> I don't know the Abiword toolkit. Do you have a link?
Please look at "af" directory of Abiword source. It contains an
abstraction
of the event handling, the
I prefer Windows native to MFC, since Windows native code is fairly easily
portable to OS/2 PM. How do you estimate Abiword toolkit (abi/src/af/)?
I don't know the Abiword toolkit. Do you have a link?
Greets,
Asger
> I prefer Windows native to MFC, since Windows native code is fairly easily
> portable to OS/2 PM. How do you estimate Abiword toolkit (abi/src/af/)?
I don't know the Abiword toolkit. Do you have a link?
Greets,
Asger
"Asger K. Alstrup Nielsen" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The only true options I have seen for Win32 toolkits are Windows native
(in C), the Microsoft Foundation Classes which are a relatively thin layer
on top of the Windows widgets (in C++), Qt, which has an emulation mode
which is pretty good,
"Asger K. Alstrup Nielsen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The only true options I have seen for Win32 toolkits are Windows native
> (in C), the Microsoft Foundation Classes which are a relatively thin layer
> on top of the Windows widgets (in C++), Qt, which has an emulation mode
> which is pretty
Uwe Another point is
Uwe cross-platform availability for both Linux/Unix and Win32.
Just a quick remark on this: The support is there, so that FLTK
applications *wrok* on Win32, but they are not nice Win32 applications.
They do not behave like other applications on Win32, and I find that
Uwe> Another point is
Uwe> cross-platform availability for both Linux/Unix and Win32.
Just a quick remark on this: The support is there, so that FLTK
applications *wrok* on Win32, but they are not nice Win32 applications.
They do not behave like other applications on Win32, and I find that