If you like declarative UI then I suggest you to look
at http://www.swixml.org/ 


--- "pepone.onrez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hi Ján
> 
> maybe JGoodies is interesting for you take a look to
> http://www.jgoodies.com/
> 
> I don't try it yet but  use same applications
> developed with it, I
> preefer Qt-4 for reach Ui applications rather than
> Java
> .
> On 11/20/06, Šoltís Ján <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've developed a couple of Tapestry apps and now
> we have to develop an application with a rich gui in
> Java (SWING or SWT).
> >
> > I particularly like 'The Tapestry way' of
> developing the UI as opposed to the Struts, JSP or
> JSF way. What I like the most is the notion of
> high-level application components that are easy to
> create, easy to use by other programmers and that
> encapsulate both visual appearance and some
> high-level functionality unique to that particular
> application.
> >
> > Our application will consist of hundreds of
> screens all of them very similar (kind of CRUD but
> not exactly). Had it been in web, Tapestry would be
> a great choice. We could create some high level
> components and our screens' sources would by very
> simple, clear and concise.
> >
> > And the question is: what do you, Tapestry
> addicts, use for development of rich gui Java apps?
> Plain SWING? SWT? Some framework?
> >
> > XUL (XSWT) is quite close to my expectations, but
> it's missing "application-level custom components".
> What's your opinion?
> >
> > thanks
> > jan soltis
> >
> >
>
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> >
> 
> 
> -- 
> play tetris http://pepone.on-rez.com/tetris
> run gentoo http://gentoo-notes.blogspot.com/
> 


Konstantin Ignatyev




PS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million 
tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical 
rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one 
hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of 
CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000

Bowers, C.A.  The Culture of Denial:  Why the Environmental Movement Needs a 
Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools.  New York:  State 
University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)

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