Ok, I'm in. (I am a win32 guy, but am beginning to like the platform less and less) I now successfully mix and match freely on GTK and Windows using wxPython + PythonDotNet + Mono or .NET in full GUI apps. It sound like this discussion is not necessarily 100% win32, or is it?
Some comments on GUI performance: The ONLY time that I've seen .NET react noticeably slowly was under Ipy. I got into the .Net connector project because I wanted to learn C# on an interesting project. I find Tim's use of the technology to be spot on. I don't plan on switching from python + wx to .NET/Mono, but it sure is nice to be able to pull components from where ever they live! On 02/27/2011 08:08 AM, Benjamin Aranguren wrote:On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 5:05 AM, Tim Golden<mail at timgolden.me.uk <http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32>> wrote:
/ On 28/02/2011 09:40, Tim Golden wrote:
/>>/ />>/ Well, the last Svn commit was 4 weeks ago, by "barton_c", and Python27 />>/ "support" (ie switches") were added 2 months ago. Looks like "Barton_C" />>/ needs to do some advertising. I'll see if I can contact him/her through />>/ sf. />/ />/ Got this reply from Barton, who's not subscribed to this list: / since when is being subscribed a prerequisite to commenting?
/
/>/ """ />/ Using the current state of the art, I freely mix wxPython, MS Framework 2.0 />/ (others are hooking to .NET 4.0) and ctypes in full GUI apps and drivers. />/ The current challenge for me is getting the whole thing working (together) />/ on Ubuntu Maverick (10.10). />/ I have brought the PythonDotNet project up to python27 compatibility, but />/ have not published the binaries yet. />/ />/ """ / _______________________________________________ python-win32 mailing list python-win32@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32