I'm
not an OTI developer, so I can't answer that part of your question. In my
case, I just haven't figured out why I would want to use SWT/Fox rather than
SWT/GTK+. Perhaps you can help clarify that point to
me.
From a
technical point of view, it sounds like an interesting project
though.
Best
regards,
Dave
Orme
Hi,
I guess I may become boring by repeating about this SWT/Fox
thing, yet I would really appreciate *any* comments on this from the OTI
developers.
I know you are not paid to try or to review or to comment on
someone else's code and that noone has asked me to do it.
But isn't there a little bit of curiosity in you? It is
so much related to your everyday work.
Given that a new port is a huge effort and that SWT (and
Eclipse) are supposedly open source, I find this silence here a little
bit, err, hostile.
Probably it's all some special kind of IBM/OTI-open
source but I really don't get it.
Regards,
Ivan
P.S. Sorry if I sound a bit harsh I didn't mean to. :-) Just
to push you a bit, that's it.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, June 09, 2003 10:11
AM
Subject: [platform-swt-dev] [ANN]
Eclipse SWT/Fox plugin available ( pre-alpha)
(This is posted in the newsgroup as well.) SWT/Fox reached a stage where it can (almost) run Eclipse.
There are still *lots* of bugs, some of them are serious showstoppers
(crashes, focusing problems, redraw problems) that will prevent one from
running Eclipse for everyday work. I'll try to fix them ASAP.
Nevertheless, I welcome everyone willing to try it out, to go to SWT/Fox
home page, http://swtfox.sf.net .
Note that there's a SWT/Fox Plugin Update Site as well, so updating
Eclipse to use SWT/Fox shouldn't be a problem. Check the home page for
more details.
There are Fox/Win32 & Fox/Linux/x86 versions of the port uploaded.
Note that the Fox/Win32 port is for testing purposes only.
The real target of the port is Fox + *nix + X11.
Since SWT/Fox is very unstable and not (yet) appropriate for daily work,
please, make a backup of your workspace directory _and_ start with a clean
one before updating Eclipse with the plugin.
I welcome any volunteer that wants to code/test/give suggestions etc.
Probably the most useful thing would be if someone with access to 64b Unix
(Solaris/Sparc, anyone?) steps up and tries to carry out the build
procedure on such machine.
In theory SWT/Fox is 64b clean and it should run anywere Posix + X11 are
available.
P.S. Once you've installed SWT/Fox in Eclipse, you can activate it by
runing Eclipse this way: 'eclipse -ws fox'
P.S. Users of older Linux distributions (pre gcc 3.2) may encounter
problems running SWT/Fox, because at the moment it is not statically
linked with libc++. (I haven't succeeded yet in convincing Ant/CPPTasks to
link *some* libraries statically.)
/Ivan
P.S. Anyone interested?
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