Well, Maven downloaded a whole bunch of things (probably good). The run step 
failed with these three messages:

Error: opening registry key 'Software\JavaSoft\Java Runtime Environment' [sure 
enough, it's not there]
Error: could not find java.dll [it's in \Program Files\Java\jdk-11.0.4\bin, 
whereas JAVA_HOME is still pointing to jdk-13 even though I thought I 
previously changed it by hand.]
Error: Could not find the Java SE Runtime Environment

-----Original Message-----
From: Geertjan Wielenga <geert...@apache.org> 
Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2019 1:25 PM
To: Walter Oney <walter.o...@oneylaw.com>
Cc: Neil C Smith <neilcsm...@apache.org>; NetBeans Mailing List 
<users@netbeans.apache.org>
Subject: Re: A Bad Thing has happened to the promise of platform independence

Now don't do anything other than this -- open the New Project dialog, go to the 
Samples category, in the JavaFX category pick one of the two samples you see 
there. Complete the wizard. Run the sample.

Gj

On Sat, Sep 28, 2019 at 7:23 PM Walter Oney <walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com> > wrote:


        Here you go.
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: Geertjan Wielenga <geert...@apache.org 
<mailto:geert...@apache.org> > 
        Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2019 1:17 PM
        To: Walter Oney <walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com> >
        Cc: Neil C Smith <neilcsm...@apache.org <mailto:neilcsm...@apache.org> 
>; NetBeans Mailing List <users@netbeans.apache.org 
<mailto:users@netbeans.apache.org> >
        Subject: Re: A Bad Thing has happened to the promise of platform 
independence
        
        Cab you go to Help | About in Apache NetBeans 11.1 and copy what you 
see there and paste it here and send it so we can really see what the 
environment is that you're making use of?
        
        Gj
        
        On Sat, Sep 28, 2019 at 7:12 PM Walter Oney <walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com>  <mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com> > > wrote:
        
        
                I'm doing this particular project on Windows 10. By 
"installing" I mean running the .exe (if there is one) from a web site or 
downloading a JAR file and putting it some place where I can find it.
        
                I keep having private conversations with Geertjan without 
meaning to -- from long habit, I hardly ever hit reply-all. Anyhow, he wondered 
what version of the JDK I was using. Initially, I think I had 11.0 or 11.1. 
Then I decided to get the latest and greatest, so I uninstalled that and 
installed 13 without realizing it didn't come with JavaFX (which I need for the 
graphics). I'm back to 11.1 now, which I downloaded from Oracle. It appears not 
to have JavaFX built-in like Oracle says it should. 
        
                I'm grateful that you guys are working on a Saturday and trying 
to help a newbie out.
        
                -----Original Message-----
                From: Neil C Smith <neilcsm...@apache.org 
<mailto:neilcsm...@apache.org>  <mailto:neilcsm...@apache.org 
<mailto:neilcsm...@apache.org> > > 
                Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2019 11:37 AM
                To: Walter Oney <walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com>  <mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com 
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com> > >
                Cc: NetBeans Mailing List <users@netbeans.apache.org 
<mailto:users@netbeans.apache.org>  <mailto:users@netbeans.apache.org 
<mailto:users@netbeans.apache.org> > >
                Subject: Re: A Bad Thing has happened to the promise of 
platform independence
        
                On Sat, 28 Sep 2019 at 12:04, Walter Oney 
<walter.o...@oneylaw.com <mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com>  
<mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com <mailto:walter.o...@oneylaw.com> > > wrote:
                > My current self-assigned task is to port the app to Linux in 
the hope that I’ll find more robust WiFi support than Win10 has. I was hopping 
along as a happy little bunny with NetBeans 8.4 and some version or another of 
the JDK that included JavaFX. I was misled by the incomplete instructions for 
installing JNA to omit downloading jna.jar. Someone later corrected my mistake 
on the stackoverflow forum, but not before I had installed JDK 13, a current 
release of OpenJFX, and NetBeans 11.1. I ended up in Version Hell, which is 
where you go when you have mismatched versions of your tools. I don’t even know 
what the path back might be.
        
                My first thought is are you doing this on the Linux machine you 
talk
                about or still on Windows 10?  If Linux, which OS?  And what 
exactly
                do you mean by "installing"?  Some of the things you mention 
there
                should probably be part of your project but not installed.  
Relying on
                Linux packages for anything other than perhaps OpenJDK is very 
hit and
                miss!
        
                Best wishes,
        
                Neil
        
        
        
        
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@netbeans.apache.org 
<mailto:users-unsubscr...@netbeans.apache.org> 
        For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@netbeans.apache.org 
<mailto:users-h...@netbeans.apache.org> 
        
        For further information about the NetBeans mailing lists, visit:
        https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/NETBEANS/Mailing+lists



---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@netbeans.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@netbeans.apache.org

For further information about the NetBeans mailing lists, visit:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/NETBEANS/Mailing+lists

Reply via email to