Hi,

Thanks for collecting feedback!

* TableView / TreeTableView: freezing columns (standard in many business apps)
* TableView: in "data grid" scenarios it would be nice if the table would 
provide an API similar to the one in Swing ("void setValueAt(Object aValue, int 
rowIndex, int columnIndex)")
* Focus traversal API -> I think this must be done one day ;)

Kind regards,
Daniel

> -----Original Message-----
> From: openjfx-dev [mailto:openjfx-dev-boun...@openjdk.java.net] On Behalf
> Of Jonathan Giles
> Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2016 12:45 AM
> To: openjfx-dev@openjdk.java.net
> Subject: Planning for JavaFX.next
> 
> Hi folks,
> 
> Development on JDK 9 is slowly starting to ramp down, and we are starting to
> turn our attention to the goals for JavaFX in JDK 10 and beyond. We are
> starting to compile our list of what we think is important, but we really 
> want to
> hear from the community about what their highest priorities are to them. As
> always, it's important to keep in mind what JavaFX is (e.g. it isn't aiming 
> to be a
> high-performance game engine), but even still there are bound to be a
> number of places where people might want to weigh in, for example:
> 
>   * New layout containers (e.g. Flexbox)
>   * Public APIs for UI control behaviors
>   * Marlin renderer enabled by default
>   * Support for CSS animations
>   * CSS performance improvements
>   * TableView improvements (cell spanning, row / column freezing, etc)
>   * TableView performance
>   * Focus traversal API
>   * WebGL support in WebView
>   * Improved image I/O support
>   * A JavaFX equivalent of the AWT Desktop APIs
>   * Multi-res image API
>   * NIO-backed writable images
> 
> If there are other areas of interest that aren't listed here, please start
> discussing them and we can work together to determine priorities.
> If all you want to do is add a +1 for one of more of the items above, even 
> that
> will be very useful.
> 
> Thanks,
> -- Jonathan

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