There needs to be a viable community that is not just Oracle to support you here ..
I think everyone has come to be dependent on Oracle to "be there".
But if there is a specific community need that Oracle doesn't see as essential, then the community should help out.

-phil.

On 12/5/17, 9:27 PM, John-Val Rose wrote:
Well, that’s all fine but you didn’t address the issue of working with someone 
within Oracle to get these innovations done.

Sure, I could just toil away by myself but clearly it would be better all 
around if there was someone with much more extensive knowledge of JavaFX and 
its internals who was accessible when required.

I would assume that a member of the Oracle JavaFX team would be such a person. 
If not, then who?

On 6 Dec 2017, at 15:53, Philip Race<philip.r...@oracle.com>  wrote:

I think looking at it as an Oracle-owned and controlled project maybe the first 
mistake here.
Yes it was closed source and then Oracle controlled, but not any more, OCA 
requirements aside.
It is not even a "java specification". It can be evolved at an API level 
without a JSR.
The JEP process is the main thing to be followed, although we also use CSRs too 
to track API.
Consider it that anyone who is a contributor owns (not the right word ?) a 
piece of it too.
So standing on the project is what matters. Not the company who pays you to 
work on it.

-phil.

On 12/5/17, 8:21 PM, John-Val Rose wrote:
Phil et. al.,

Whilst I’m not going to be quite as “passionate” as some on this issue 
(although I do understand the frustration), I would like to point out again 
that this is indeed a huge gap and it is critical that it is filled ASAP.

Obviously a solution where every word in a text document is a Node would be 
unworkable so it would need to be architected from the ground up.

I would be happy to work on such as feature, just as I was happy to work on 
implementing WebGL, but my hesitation is concern over the assistance and 
involvement from Oracle.

If I am going to have to spend months working on something without any or only 
minimal involvement from Oracle, only to find at the end that Oracle either 
doesn’t like the design, implementation or something else then it is wasted 
time I’ll never get back.

There are lots of other innovations too that I would like to see in JavaFX but 
I just don’t “feel the enthusiasm” from Oracle.

If there is someone on the JavaFX team who would be willing to work with me (at 
least in some capacity), please have them contact me privately via email.

The innovations I could work on and contribute include:

1. WebGL support in WebView
2. Better text support including text documents&   rich text editors etc.
3. Significant improvements in scene graph rendering speed using modern 
game-engine style structures and algorithms

JavaFX cannot survive without innovation and I am keen to see it happen and 
contribute as much as possible.

Graciously,

John-Val Rose
Rosethorn Technology

On 6 Dec 2017, at 11:36, jav...@use.startmail.com wrote:

Sorry about all the typos previously.

Question- why not use the code in awt ? I am not totally up on what's going on 
with the platforms' native rendering engines ( meaning, I have no idea 
whatsoever) or how they have changed, but golly it sure does still work pretty 
well.

  At least it seems to me looking at awt that a smallish number of things are 
1) well defined by the native platofrm and 2) would more or less translate 
directly to an Java API and 3) from those small number of building blocks, 
(Font and Glyph metrics and this kind of thing)   text line layout algorithms 
can be written by ordinary civilians along with all the other stuff that goes 
into a text editor.

And yes, everything does look easy when someone else is going to do it.


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