Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET
Tutorial Details:
There is a huge number of various GUI libraries and GUI components for different environments, platforms and languages on the market at present. Such a situation can drive you mad if you try to find the best solution. What should be selected: the .NET or Java platform, Windows or UNIX? Which one provides the most flexible solution? Where is the richest UI component set? What about performance and system resources usage? And so forth ...
If you have these or the like problems in your project, then LwVCL is the very solution to these technological challenges.
Read
Tutorial at: Click here to view the tutorial
Rate Tutorial: Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET
View Tutorial: Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET
Related
Tutorials:
C# : A language alternative or just J--? (part1)
C# : A language alternative or just J--? (part1) |
Device programming with MIDP, Part
1 - JavaWorld
January
2001
Device programming with MIDP, Part
1 - JavaWorld
January
2001 |
Java Web Start to the rescue - JavaWorld July
2001
Java Web Start to the rescue - JavaWorld July
2001 |
Will Big Blue
eclipse the Java
tools market?
Will Big Blue
eclipse the Java
tools market? |
Rumble in the
jungle: J2EE versus .Net, Part
1
Rumble in the
jungle: J2EE versus .Net, Part
1 |
Best tools for
mobile application development
Best tools for
mobile application development |
J2ME devices:
Real-world performance
J2ME devices:
Real-world performance |
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part I
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part Learn how to implement Web-based user interfaces with JSF |
Big designs for
small devices
Big designs for
small devices |
Let the mobile
games begin, Part 2
Let the mobile
games begin, Part 2 |
High-availability mobile applications
High-availability mobile applications |
Overcome J2SE
1.3-1.4 incompatibilities
Overcome J2SE
1.3-1.4 incompatibilities |
G (2D graphic library)
G is a generic graphics library built on top of Java 2D in order to make scene graph oriented 2D graphics available to client applications in a high level, easy to use way |
HA-JDBC: High-Availability JDBC
HA-JDBC: High-Availability JDBC
Summary
HA-JDBC is a JDBC driver proxy that provides light-weight, transparent clustering capability to any underlying JDBC driver.
|
Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET
Light-Weight Visual Components Library for different platform: SWT, J2SE, J2ME, .NET |
Understanding MIDP System Threads
Describes the multi-threaded aspects of the J2ME application environment. Understanding the interactions between systems threads, user-interface and application threads will help in avoiding MIDlet deadlock. |
Write custom appenders for log4j
The Apache Software Foundation's log4j logging library is one of the better logging systems around. It's both easier to use and more flexible than Java's built-in logging system. |
What package names are defined in the J2ME environment?
A compendium of J2ME package names, neatly arranged by JSR and presented for your illumination. |
Interoperability with Patterns and Strategies for Document-Based Web Services
In Part 2 of this article, we demonstrate interoperability for document-driven web services with Microsoft .NET (C#) using strategies discussed in Part 1. |
Comparing J2ME Multimedia Options
This article presents the latest developments in MMAPI: the new security considerations raised in MMAPI 1.1, the differences between MMAPI and the MIDP 2.0 Media API, J2ME Wireless Toolkit 2.2 support for MMAPI, and JSR 234, Advanced Multimedia Supplement |
|
|
|