Am 03.12.2011, 07:14 Uhr, schrieb Alexey Prokhin
<alexey.prok...@yandex.ru>:
a wrote:
QML looks like it is (currently ?) targeted at the kind of GUI
programming
when you make your own custom widgets for everything. It only provides
the
most basic components such as rectangles, text, and images. There isn't,
say, a button components - you have to make one using a Rectangle and a
MouseArea. One consequence of this is that typical GUI programming is
much
slower. Another consequence is that you can't build GUIs that look
native
on multiple platforms. QML is probably great for some things, but it is
not a replacement for GUI toolkits such as Qt.
No, there are widgets with native look and feel for QML:
http://labs.qt.nokia.com/2011/03/10/qml-components-for-desktop/ . Right
now
it is a research project, but it most likely will be a part of the
upcoming
Qt5.
That stuff looks convincingly native on Gnome and Windows.