Hi, Aussie Nigel McFarlane (author of the upcoming 700+ page XUL Thriller) wrote up an article for IBM developerWorks titled "Create Web applets with Mozilla and XML: Mozilla's simple and flexible XUL saves time when building Java-less applets" that opens with the following executive summary:
To go beyond simple HTML, historically the only options have been to use Java or plugins. Now, you have a new way -- write and display applications in XML. The Mozilla runtime provides such a mechanism. In this article, Nigel McFarlane introduces XUL (the XML User-interface Language). XUL is set of UI widgets with extensive cross-platform support that are designed for building UI elements for applications that have traditional, non-HTML UIs. After answering the perennial newbie question "Why XUL?" Nigel shows off a XUL example for a trouble-ticket system and comments: This listing is hardly larger than a single Java class, and yet it is an application's entire UI. XUL provides convenient brevity. The tags, like toolbar, menu, textbox, and radiogroup are refreshingly simple -- no 3GL calls are required to XCreatePixmapFromBitmapData() or other low-level agony. Full story @ http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/web/library/wa-appmozx/ - Gerald ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email sponsored by: Enterprise Linux Forum Conference & Expo The Event For Linux Datacenter Solutions & Strategies in The Enterprise Linux in the Boardroom; in the Front Office; & in the Server Room http://www.enterpriselinuxforum.com _______________________________________________ xul-announce mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xul-announce