Qt Jambi is a new and noteworthy alternative to Swing and Java 2D for developing rich, cross-platform desktop-application interfaces. In this article JavaWorld contributor Jeff Hanson introduces the ...
Qt, pronounced “cute” or “cue-tee,” is a cross-platform graphical user interface (GUI) framework. It has a long history, starting with Nokia and eventually winding up with Digia. The Qt Project is the ...
Qt always has included the ability to render basic HTML and download files with HTTP. With the release of version 4.4.0, this has been taken to a whole new level with the inclusion of WebKit.
More and more projects require a software component these days. With everything being networked, it is getting harder to avoid having to provide software for a desktop or phone environment as well as ...
Only two serious choices for a GUI toolkit are left: Qt and GTK. Motif still lives on, but nobody uses it for anything new. When Qt 3.0 was released in October 2001, it was a singificant upgrade and ...
Qt—which lives in desktop applications, embedded systems, and mobile devices in consumer electronics, vehicles, medical devices, and industrial automation systems to support cross-platform ...
Nokia has announced the official release of Qt 4.7, a new version of the company’s open source development toolkit. The update introduces an impressive new framework called “Qt Quick” that accelerates ...
Applications using Qt that use the open-source licenses need to follow the same license, so their source would need to be made available. The commercial license allows closed-source projects. Digia ...