I thought SWT was a GUI library that was
cross-platform and consistent, but thin and implemented against native
components. As such, it should be
entirely reasonable to put hooks in, but given that this is Java, which does
have introspection, then you should be able to work something out even if you
don’t have extra special hooks.
Regards,
Christian.
-----Original Message-----
From: platform-swt-dev-admin@xxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:platform-swt-dev-admin@xxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Steve_Northover@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, January 20, 2003
12:32 PM
To: platform-swt-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: SWT History and
Design Decisions (WAS: [platform-swt-dev] AWT Toolkit using SWT (was: From
Swing to SWT))
Lane and others, SWT is a direct interface to the
operating system. As stated on the SWT component page, our intent is to
be as thin a layer as possible. Thus, it is unlikely that we will be
adding any low level support for GUI builders in the near future. We
consider functionality that does not directly correspond to anything the
operating system provides to be suspect.
We
believe that the right answer at this point is to use adapters. If this
turns out to be an unworkable strategy, we can look at it again.
Note:
Through JSR 175, Sun seems to be reexamining the issue of meta data outside of
Java Beans. In the long term, this might be the direction.