44 projects tagged "Widget Sets"
FLTK (pronounced "fulltick") is a cross-platform C++ GUI toolkit for UNIX/Linux (X11), Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X. It provides modern GUI functionality without the bloat, and supports 3D graphics via OpenGL and its built-in GLUT emulation. FLTK is designed to be small and modular enough to be statically linked, and also works fine as a shared library. It also includes an excellent UI builder called FLUID that can be used to create applications in minutes.
GTK, which stands for the Gimp ToolKit, is a library for creating graphical user interfaces. It is designed to be small and efficient, but still flexible enough to allow the programmer freedom in the interfaces created. GTK provides some unique features over standard widget libraries.
Qt is a comprehensive, object-oriented development framework that enables development of high-performance, cross-platform rich-client and server-side applications. When you implement a program with Qt, you can run it on the X Window System (Unix/X11), Apple Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows NT/9x/2000/XP by simply compiling the source code for the platform you want. Qt is the basis for the KDE desktop environment, and is also used in numerous commercial applications such as Google Earth, Skype for Linux, and Adobe Photoshop Elements.
STklos is a free Scheme System conforming to R5RS. The implementation is based on an ad-hoc Virtual Machine. It can also be compiled as a library, so that one can easily embed it in an application. Its features include an efficient and powerful object system based on CLOS, a simple-to-use module system, implementation of the full tower of numbers defined in R5RS, and easy connection to the GTK+ toolkit. STklos is the successor of STk, a Scheme interpreter tightly connected to the Tk toolkit.
Tcl provides a portable scripting environment for Unix, Windows, and Macintosh that supports string processing and pattern matching, native file system access, shell-like control over other programs, TCP/IP networking, timers, and event-driven I/O. Tcl has traditional programming constructs like variables, loops, procedures, namespaces, error handling, script packages, and dynamic loading of DLLs. Tk provides portable GUIs on UNIX, Windows, and Macintosh. A powerful widget set and the concise scripting interface to Tk make it a breeze to develop sophisticated user interfaces.
ActiveTcl is a Tcl distribution available for many operating systems. It is complete and easy to use, and offers quality-assured ActiveTcl Business Solutions. It also offers ActiveTcl Enterprise, which gives you support and maintenance packages for your company. The ActiveTcl OEM licensing provides you full redistribution rights, plus optional support and co-marketing packages.
Tkinter is Python's de facto standard GUI (Graphical User Interface) package. It is a thin object-oriented layer on top of Tcl/Tk. To use Tkinter, you don't need to write Tcl code, but you will need to consult the Tk documentation and occasionally the Tcl documentation (since Tk's low-level event handling mechanism is considered part of Tcl).
XWT is the XML Windowing Toolkit. It lets you write remote applications that run on a server, yet can "project" their user interface onto any computer, anywhere on the Internet. It can precisely match the appearance and behavior of normal desktop applications. Unlike other remote-display technologies, XWT applications are usable and responsive regardless of network congestion, delays, and even complete network failures. Visual layout is specified using a dialect of XML which is extremely similar to HTML tables, whilst interactivity is scripted in industry-standard ECMAscript (JavaScript). Existing HTML/JavaScript developers can be productive immediately with XWT.