Looking again at your original post, if what you want is a
cross-platform application framework, have a look at ZooLib:
http://zoolib.sourceforge.net/
ZooLib allows you to deliver native applications for Mac OS, Windows,
BeOS and Linux/XWindows from a single C++ source base. It is open
source under the MIT license.
ZooLib doesn't have anything to do with XML, but the application I wrote
for Mac and Windows last year was written in ZooLib and included Xerces
to handle its configuration and user document files. The data for the
UI was largely described with XML. As I said I have a more general
purpose application of XML to user interfaces that I will include in my
next ZooLib application.
ZooLib isn't the only cross-platform application framework available. A
reasonably complete list can be found at The GUI Toolkit, Framework Page:
http://www.theoffice.net/guitool
I think XML is just a dandy way to describe a user interface. And it's
not silly or a waste of bandwidth; you don't describe your windows at a
pixel-by-pixel level in XML but in logical terms.
Mike Crawford
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.goingware.com/
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