Personally, I thing all of the current GUI builders look like Windows ports (since they mostly are), and do not reflect the way a Mac user would develop anything, never mind a GUI designer. For the most part, I think it is going to take a tool which originates on the Mac to be one which actually looks and behaves like Mac users would expect....
This is a very good point, but it's really not about the GUI toolkit, it's about choices that the designer makes. I've made it a personal mission to try to keep people from using MDI with wxPython, but it's a hard one with Windows developers...(SPE was one of these)
wx uses the native widgets for the most part, so how Mac-like and app is is really a function of how it's designed. Not that every Mac-ism is supported, but it's pretty close.
which I suppose is what PyObjC is all about...
I'm sure you could write an app with Cocoa that didn't look or feel like a Mac app either, but it would be harder.
That being said, I think there is a convergent of styles between Windows, Mac, and Unix. It's just not that different anymore.
-Chris
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