Hi Phyo,
I have exactly the same question as yours when you first started this
thread 1 month ago.
can you share your working sample with qooxdoo and web2py integration?
I am interested in using Qooxdoo for custom UI in front of web2py.
Thanks,
Wen

my email=wen.g.g...@gmail.com

On Sep 19, 3:31 pm, Phyo Arkar <phyo.arkarl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> yeah , how abt retrofittingQooxdoointo pyjamas? it should work. It
> will be easier. Then introduce it into web2py how thats soudns? I only
> tested pyjamas a bit.
>
> after coding mnore and more inQooxdoo,I realize jquery-UI main
> weakness is making user depending on html and css , and selectors.
> Actually that wont work for application style UIs.
>
> why i like about  qooxdoois i never (really never) have to look back
> at html and CSS at all. another main point is as i am a java hater ,
> even thoqooxdoocode is much like java its still in javascript so its
> a lot easier.And not like GWT it dont need java to do anything at all
> just python to generate and compile code :) .
>
> On 9/20/11, Ross Peoples <ross.peop...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > I have been looking atqooxdooas a replacement for jQuery UI for quite a
> > while, since they seem to have a nice set of widgets. I don't know why it
> > takes the jQuery UI team over a year to make a menubar widget (that's still
> > not finished), when you could probably write your own high-quality version
> > in a couple of days. That is the one thing that really bugs me about jQuery
> > UI: the seemingly stagnent development pace. I understand that things like
> > accessibility take a little more time, but other frameworks (and even
> > individuals) can crank out new widgets in no time that are sometimes higher
> > quality than the jQuery UI ones. (end rant)
>
> > Anyways, as you mentioned, web2py is focused more on traditional HTML.
> >Qooxdooseems to generate its own HTML based on the JavaScript code you
> > enter (like with desktop programming). It seems more like an AJAX
> > application builder rather than an HTML additive, like jQuery. Before coming
> > to web2py, I evaluated Vaadin, which is a Java server/client integrated
> > framework that is built on Google Web Toolkit (like pyjamas is). Only you
> > program everything in Java. It's pretty powerful and the widgets were the
> > best I've ever seen (quite a lot of them too). The only problem with it
> > though is that trying to do something that would be simple with HTML and
> > JavaScript would require you to make your own widget and recompile the
> > entire widget set. It was great for working inside the box, but way too
> > difficult if you wanted to step outside the box.
>
> > Enough with the babbling: what we would need to do is make aqooxdoohelper
> > that can generate JS code for the widgets. However, it might just be easier
> > for everyone to write their own JavaScript, since it's well documented on
> > theqooxdoosite. As for the AJAX communications, according to theqooxdoo
> > site:http://manual.qooxdoo.org/1.4.x/pages/communication/rpc.htmlthey use
> > JSON-RPC, which web2py already supports. They also have a Python RPC server
> > (for an older version of
> >qooxdoo):http://qooxdoo.org/contrib/project/rpcpythonso that could
> > probably integrated into a web2py plugin or contrib module. Source
> > link:
> >https://qooxdoo-contrib.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/qooxdoo-contrib/t...
>
> > So to have web2py supportqooxdooapps, it would take a little bit of work,
> > but it's totally do-able, and some of the pieces are already there.

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