Thanks for all the great replies! You've reaffirmed my #1 and #2
seeds -- wxpython and a web app. I haven't really found any show
stoppers for wxpython, but I guess I was unnecessarily suspicious.
dabodev.com looks like it targets my problem so that's something I'll
definitely look at.
I had one
Check out Dabo. It is a framework that wraps wxpython and is developed
on the mac and is deployed on mac, windows and linux. It has great
features like an app builder to get you up and running quickly.
http://dabodev.com/
And for the email list:
http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/dabo-users
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You may have a look at easygui. Probably not for final release, rather for
design stage. It's based on tkinter I guess. I found it very helpful as long as
the app does not require sophisticated widgets and there is a proper separation
of process and UI. Once everything works, it is fast enough t
"greg whittier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
Deploying to the Mac seems to be the most difficult from what I've
read.
That's probably true in that for a truly native experience you
need to pay a lot of attention to Apple's guidelines and use
some kind of tool to produce the correct bundle of fil
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 9:03 PM, greg whittier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> - web app running locally -- no experience with this, but everybody
> has a web browser and there are frameworks like django I could use
> - curses -- probably not as pretty as mac/windows users would expect
>
I'd probably
Hi gang,
I know this is probably like asking whether vi or emacs is better, but I'm
looking for the best cross-platform (linux, windows, mac os x) user
interface toolkit. Since the users won't be programmers, I'd like it to
feel as much like a native app as possible in terms of installation. It