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unknown user |
Yes, Baby another rhican thread. First the absurd rules: - You can not be named unime, bb, or logos - You can not be taller than 1m95 (tall people are ewy) - You can not be smaller than 1m30, If walt disney has this restriction so can I - Your mass in grams may not be a prime number or divisible by two The (brilliant) idea, plug code: - Not just any code, it have to be frameworks, libraries, toolkits. - I mean frameworks in the broadest sense. But a clear preference to general frameworks that can be used in actual development. - Frameworks, which are basically just end user applications, because they are only applicable in rare cases, or licensed to restrictively. - framework, libraries, code that you would reuse to build your application on. - you should have at least some experience, and knowledge about the framework. To a point where you feel comfortable you can answer a (general) question about it from another member if somebody asked you. - you aren't allowed to bash other code, just endorse what you are plugging - if you can link to the main websites, and support sources... just to help out anybody thinking about it In case you haven't figured it out yet, the above enumeration is the real list of rules.. If you guys just add the toolkit/libraries/frameworks, you are being forced to work on currently, we could build a little record of what's actually in use, and what's around. In some areas like Linux sound that could be a real help.. This brilliant idea came to me when i discovered ![]() the kick off: I'll kick it off with my recommendation for Qt. It's a brilliant object oriented toolkit, that works on all major platforms. Looks good, is easy to use, has a nice gui to create gui's. Has a nice build system, and other tool support. If you just link this in rather than use whatever is native on your platform, you will have + more power + easier portability for native apps + broad user base + extensive documentation, and examples - downside is that it's not free to write closed source apps with the toolkit for free. So either opensource for free, or closed source for a licensing fee. the main docs http://doc.trolltech.com/4.3/ irc.freenode.org #qt distrubution also ships with: qt designer which allows you to graphically design you gui's as you are used to, and other interesting ones do check it them out ps: this is what of a lame idea, but I created a thread here, which i wanted to delete, and seeing as I can't delete, I filled it with some content. If you came this far without noticing I succeeded ![]() |
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07.01.2008 04:37:37 |
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N1Ck37![]() |
Yay, I'm 1.94 m, I can join ![]() ![]() The framework I'm currently working on and using as well is nexxos. Unfortunately the webiste is not online yet but I think it will be quit soon. Once it's there you can find it at www.nexxos.com and www.nexxos.org It's a framework for building websites and it's written in php. (and no, it's not just another CMS ![]() |
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Bander![]() ![]() |
Here's a cool one. It's called the Mono Project. Basically the .NET framework ported over to other platforms. Complete with C# compiler. http://www.mono-project.com/Main_Page ![]() Mono provides the necessary software to develop and run .NET client and server applications on Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X, Windows, and Unix. Sponsored by Novell (http://www.novell.com), the Mono open source project has an active and enthusiastic contributing community and is positioned to become the leading choice for development of Linux applications. |
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