Re: JavaFX 12

2020-08-05 Thread Chuck Davis
Thanks for those links, Scott. On Wed, Aug 5, 2020 at 3:00 PM Scott Palmer wrote: > You might also consider running with a distribution of OpenJDK that > includes JavaFX. That simplifies things quite a bit. No need to fiddle with > the module path. > > One such distribution is Bell Soft’s

Re: JavaFX 12

2020-08-05 Thread Scott Palmer
You might also consider running with a distribution of OpenJDK that includes JavaFX. That simplifies things quite a bit. No need to fiddle with the module path. One such distribution is Bell Soft’s Liberica JDK (Full version, not Standard) https://bell-sw.com/pages/downloads/#/java-14-current

Re: JavaFX 12

2020-08-05 Thread Chuck Davis
I suggest you take Ernie's suggestion to get started (use the fxml archtype). You can build and run your application in NB. The first thing to do after creating the project is edit the POM to update to newer versions of Maven artifacts. Then, when you wish to run your application outside NB you

Re: JavaFX 12

2020-08-05 Thread Ernie Rael
The easiest way to run jfx with NetBeans is through maven. In NetBeans you can do NewProject.. > JavaWithMaven > "Simpe JavaFX Maven Archetype" (or the FXML one if that's what you're after) This gives you a simple project that you can run and debug. -ernie On 8/5/2020 11:52 AM, HRH

JavaFX 12

2020-08-05 Thread HRH
Hi, Trying to build a JavaFX project with Netbeans 12.0 IDE, using the online documentation Getting Started with JavaFX | | | | Getting Started with JavaFX Getting started with JavaFX for Java desktop application development | | | In step 3 of this page, adding the JavaFX12 to the