-------------------------------------------
New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
-------------------------------------------
Programmers wanted!
Motivation
----------
Unix popularity grows thanks to the free variants, mostly Linux. But still a
consistant, nice looking free desktop-environment is missing. There are
several nice either free or low-priced applications available, so that
Linux/X11 would almost fit everybody needs if we could offer a real GUI.
Of course there are GUI's. There is the Commond Desktop Environment (much
too exansive), Looking Glas (not too expensive but not really the solution),
and several free X-Filemanagers that are almost GUI's. Moxfm for example is
very well done, but unfortunately it is based on Motif. Anyway, the
question is: What is a GUI? What should a GUI be?
First of all, since there are a lot of missunderstandings on this topic,
what is NOT a GUI:
- the X-Window-System is NOT a GUI. It's what its name says: A Window system
- Motif is NOT a GUI. They tried to create a GUI when they made Motif, but
unfortunately they couldn't really agree, so they released Motif as
Widget-Library with a Window-Manager. Much later they completed Motif with
the CDE, but too late, since Windows already runs on the majority of
desktops.
- Window-managers are NOT GUI's. They are (better: should be) small programs
that handle the windows. It's not really the idea to hack a lot of stuff
into them.
IMHO a GUI should offer a complete, graphical environment. It should allow a
users to do his everyday tasks with it, like starting applications, reading
mail, configuring his desktop, editing some files, delete some files, look
at some pictures, etc. All parts must fit together and work together. A
nice button with a nice "Editor"-icon isn't not at all a graphical user
environment if it invokes "xterm -e vi". Maybe you have been disappointed
long time ago too, when you installed X with a nice window manager, clicked
on that beautiful "Help"-Icon ... chrk chrk (the hard disk)...an ugly,
unsuable, weird xman appeared on the desktop :-(
A GUI for endusers
------------------
The idea is NOT to create a GUI for the complete UNIX-system or the
System-Administrator. For that purpose the UNIX-CLI with thousands of tools
and scripting languages is much better. The idea is to create a GUI for an
ENDUSER. Somebody who wants to browse the web with Linux, write some letters
and play some nice games.
I really believed that is even yet possible with Linux until I configured my
girlfriends Box. Well, I didn't notice anymore that I work with lots of
different kind of menues, scrollbars and textwidgets. I already know that
some widgets need to be under the mouse when they should get the keyevents,
some sliders wants the middle mouse for dragging and some textwidgets only
want emacs-bindings and don't understand keys like "pos1" or "end". And
selecting some text is different everywere, too. Even the menues and buttons
(for exampel Xaw, Fvwm, XForms, Motif) behave completely different.
One word to the Athena-Widgets: Although there are a few nice applications
available that uses these "widgets" we should really get rid of them.
Thinking that "Athena is a widget-library" is a similar missunderstanding
like "X is a GUI". Athena is an very old example how widget libraries could
be implemented with Xlib and Xt. It's more or less a online-documentation
for Widget-Set-Programmers, but not a tool for application-programmers.
Unfortunately, the old Unix problem, a so good online-documentation that
people used it for applications.
So one of the major goals is to provide a modern and common look&feel for
all the applications. And this is exactly the reason, why this project is
different from elder attempts.
Since a few weeks a really great new widget library is available free in
source and price for free software development. Check out
http://www.troll.no
The stuff is called "Qt" and is really a revolution in programming X. It's
an almost complete, fully C++ Widget-library that implementes a slightly
improved Motif look and feel, or, switchable during startup, Window95.
The fact that it is done by a company (Troll Tech) is IMO a great advantage.
We have the sources and a superb library, they have beta testers. But they
also spend their WHOLE TIME in improving the library. They also give great
support. That means, Qt is also interesting for commercial applications. A
real alternative to the terrible Motif :) But the greatest pro for Qt is the
way how it is programmed. It's really a very easy-to-use powerfull
C++-library.
Qt is also portable, yet to Windows95/NT, but you do not have to worry about
that. It's very easy to use UNIX/X specific things in programming, so that
porting to NT is hardly possible :-)
I really recommand looking at this library. It has IMO the power to become
the leading library for free software development. And it's a way to escape
the TCL/TK monsters that try to slow down all our processors and eat up our
memory...
It's really time yet to standarize the desktop somewhat. It's nonsense to
load 10 different widgets into memory for the same task.
Imagine this desktop:
- fvwm (own widgets)
- rxvt (own widgets)
- tgif (own widgets)
- xv (own widgets)
- ghostview (athena widgets)
- lyx (xforms widgets)
- xftp (motif widgets)
- textedit (xview widgets)
- arena (own widgets)
One may argue that a usual UNIX-Box has enough memory to handle all these
different kind of widgets. Even if this might be correct, the really
annoying thing is, that all these widgets (menus, buttons, scrollbars, etc.)
behave slightly different. And this isn't only an academic example, I've
really seen such desktops :-}
I know we couldn't get rid of this chaos at once, but my dream is a
coexistance between Motif and Qt.
The Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
----------------------------------
I don't have the time to do this all alone (also since LyX is my main
project). But a thing like a Desktop Environment can easily be cut into lots
of parts. There is very probably a part for you, too! If you want to learn
some X-programming, why not doing a small, neat project for the KDE? If you
know others who like to programm something, please pretend them from writing
the 1004th tetris games or the 768th minesweeper clone ;-) Think we also
have enough XBiffs yet...
So here is my project list so far. Probably there are even more things to do
that would fit great into the KDE. It's a very open project.
- Panel:
The basic application. Run's as FvwmModule (at the beginning). Offers a
combination between Windows95 and CDE. I think about a small taskbar at
the bottom and a kind of CDE-panel on the top of the screen. The panel has
graphical icon menus on the left (similar to GoodStuff) to launch
applications, 4 buttons in the middle to switch to other virtual desktops
and few icons for often needed applications on the right. There is for
example a mail-icon that also indicates new mail, a wastebasket to open
the delete-folder (that also indicates when it isn't empty and is capable
of drag'n'drop). Maybe a analog clock with date at the very right. Also a
nice special icon for exiting the environment or locking the screen. All
the stuff is completly configurable via GUI. I'm also thinking about
solutions, that only available applications can be installed on the
desktop and that new applications appear on the desktop automatically.
I started to work on this panel, but would of course love some help. There
are also lot of smaller things to do, like a tool to chose a background
pixmap (for each virtual desktop) etc.
Also nice icons are needed!
- Filemanager
Another major application inside the KDE. The idea is not to create a
powerful high-end graphical bash-replacement (like tkdesk tries to be),
but a nice looking easy-to-use filemanager for simple tasks. Simple tasks
are mainly deleting some files, copying some files, copying some files on
the disk, starting applications by clicking on a file (for example
ghostview for postscript files or xli for gifs, etc).
I'm thinking about nice windows, one for each directory, that shows icons
for every file. It should be possible to drag files around (either copy or
move), even between different windows. Another important point is the
support of the floppy-disk, so that mounting/umounting is done
user-transparent.
Dragging of icons should be done in a nice way, that means moving around a
special window (see Qt's xshape example), NOT like xfm or xfilemanager by
setting another monochrome bitmap for the cursor.
So it will also be possible to put files as icons on the desktop. This is
IMO a very nice feature. Since applications are launched by the panel,
it's even clear that icons are real data-objects. With fvwm-1 and the
FvwmFileMgr it wasn't really clear wether an icon is yet a file or an
iconified window.
Drag'n'drop inside a Qt application isn't really difficult.
The filemanager is IMO a very nice and not too time consuming project.
Who wants?
- mail client
A really comfortable mailclient. IMO the most comfortable mailclient for X
is yet XF-Mail. And the author is willing to port it to Qt when the
KDE-project will start! But he asks for some assitance (for example for
coding the small popups, etc.)
- easy texteditor
Very small but important project. An editor that fits the needs of those
who have to edit a textfile once in a month and didn't find the time yet
to learn vi (and don't have the time to wait for x-emacs to start, and
don't have the memory to use a motif-static-nedit, and don't have the
cpu-power and memory to use a tk-monster like tkedit,...)
Unfortunatly the Qt multiline-textwidget isn't available in Qt-1.0, but
Troll-Tech already announced the beta-testing. So the texteditor can be
started in a few weeks, too.
- Terminal
Similar to the CDE terminal program. A kind of xterm with nice menu bar to
set the font, exit, etc. Nice project, get the xterm sources and add a GUI
with Qt!
- Image viewer
The application that will be launced as default from the filemanager for
gifs, jpegs and all this. Well, xv is shareware and really needs quite a
long time for startup. But there is a plain Xlib programm without any
menues or buttons called "xli". Get the sources and make it userfriendly
with Qt!
- Lots of small other tools:
* xdvi with Qt-Gui
* ghostview with Qt-Gui
* xmag with Qt-Gui
* whatever you want
- Hypertext Help System
A complete desktop environment needs a nice hypertext online help. I think
the best choice would be HTML (>= 2.0). So a free Qt-based html-viewer
would be a great idea. It might be possible to use the Arena-sources, but
arena needs very long for startup. Maybe it would be best to start from
scratch. Qt offers excellent functions for dealing with different fonts.
For a help system HTML 2.0 is more than enough, some nice search function
added and that's it. Since it is also possible to convert the obsolete
troff man-pages to HTML, we can also integrate the original UNIX help
system.
BTW: There is a Troll Tech Qt-competition (look at their webpages). The
best application (not only functionallity, but also design counts. Just
porting an existing great application to Qt won't probably be enough :-( )
wins $2000 and a few Qt on NT licenses (worth another $2000). They also
mentioned a browser-project as an example. So a nice HTML-browser in Qt,
ready in Janurary may be worth $4000 (This includes selling the unneeded
NT licenses ;-) )
- Window Manager
At the beginning, the KDE panel will work as an Fvwm-Module. When this is
done, a lot of stuff can be stripped from the bloated fvwm window manager.
We don't need anymore fvwm-menus, icon handling and zillions of
configurable things. We need a small, realiable windowmanager. So maybe
stripping all unncessary stuff from fvwm will make sense in a while. But
this may come very last.
- System Tools
Whatever a user, or you, might need. A graphical passwd comes to my mind.
But probably there are a lot more! Maybe this will lead to a little system
administration tool someday.
- Games
We have yet a nice tetris game (an Qt example program). What is needed is
a nice set of small games like solitaire (please with nice cards that can
be really dragged!). There are several nice card games available for X,
for example xpat2. So why not take the cards from them and write a real
solitaire games, very similar to MS-Solitaire. I really had to install
Wine sometimes just to play solitair, what an overhead! But other games
are needed, too. Take xmris, pacman, etc. add a nice GUI. Or write some
from scratch. Whatever you want :)
- Icons
A set of nice icons. 3D-pixmaps are quite a good start (but why should the
button be inside a pixmap, if we use a toolkit with buttons???)
- Documentation
A documentation project is always a good thing to have. But before we
should clearify how the hypertext help system should look like. We can
then start with documentation pages in the chosen HTML-subset and for
example use arean as help browser. Anyway we need some application to
document first.
- Web-Pages / Ftp Server / Aministration
We need a server for the files and webpages that inform about the state of
the project. Especially what projects are currently worked on and what
projects still wait for somebody to do them. I set up a preliminary
homepage on
http://www-pu.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/users/ettrich
that just contains this posting yet and a few links. I may setup real
webpages for the very beginning but I would be very happy if I could
concentrate on discussion and coding. So if there is someone out there in
the net who likes to design and maintain webpages, here is a job for him
:)
- Discussion
The most important topic :-) If you are interested please
join the mailing list
k...@fiwi02.wiwi.uni-tuebingen.de
Subscribing can be done by sending a mail with in *Body*:
subscribe <your email address>
to
kde-r...@fiwi02.wiwi.uni-tuebingen.de.
- Applications
When the KDE gets widely accepted, new (free) applications will hopefully
be based on Qt, too, to fit with the comfortable and pleasant look and
feel of the desktop.
We may for example port LyX to Qt, so that a comfortable wordprocessor is
available. But that is still in discussion in the LyX Team.
A nice vector-orientated drawing tool would also be fine. Well, Xfig is a
powerful but ugly monster. But there is "tgif", a very powerful, easy to
use but ugly program. The author don't like the idea of adding a Qt GUI
for the menus, icons and scrollbars, since Qt is C++ and he wants to keep
tgif plain C, since on some sites no C++ compiler is available. Well, the
KDE doesn't really aim on these old and weird UNIX boxes (also I think a
g++ is almost everywhere available). But maybe the tgif-author agrees when
somebody else adds a nice GUI to tgif (the sources are free, don't know
wether this is GPL). Since tgif yet implements its own GUI this shouldn't
be too difficult. It's really easy with Qt to access plain Xlib
functionality and functions, so not very much will have to be rewritten.
Also C++ makes it very easy to include plain C code.
What about an easy to use, nice newsreader similar to knews? Could also be
integrated into the KDE. ... and ... and ... and.
So there is a lot of work (and fun) to do! If you are interested, please
join the mailing list. If we get about 20-30 people we could start. And
probably before 24th December the net-community will give itself another
nice and longtime-needed gift.
The stuff will be distributed under the terms of the GPL.
I admit the whole thing sounds a bit like fantasy. But it is very serious
from my side. Everybody I'm talking to in the net would LOVE a somewhat
cleaner desktop. Qt is the chance to realize this. So let us join our rare
sparetime and just do it!
Hopefully looking foward to lots of followups and replies!
Regards,
Matthias Ettrich
(ett...@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de)
BTW: Usually these postings get a lot of answers like "Use a Mac if you want
a GUI, CLI rules!", "I like thousands of different widgets-libraries on my
desktop, if you are too stupid to learn them, you should use windoze", "RAM
prices are so low, I only use static motif programs", "You will never
succeed, so better stop before the beginning", "Why Qt? I prefer
schnurz-purz-widgets with xyz-lisp-shell. GPL! Check it out!", etc. Thanks
for not sending these as followup to this posting :-) I know I'm a
dreamer...
BTW2: You might wonder why I'm so against Tk. Well, I don't like the
philosophy: Tk's doesn't have a textwidget, for example, but a slow
wordprocessor. Same with other widgets. In combination with TCL the programs
become slow and ugly (of course there are exceptions). I didn't yet see any
application that uses Tk from C++ or C, although an API seems to exist.
TCL/TK is very usefull for prototyping. Ideal for example for kernel
configuration. And since Tk looks little similar to Motif, the widgets are
also quite easy to use. But I really don't like any TCL/Tk application to
stay permanantly on the desktop. And Qt is much easier (at least as easy) to
program. Check it out!
BTW3: I don't have any connections to Troll Tech, I just like their product
(look at the sources: really high quality!) and their kind of marketing:
free sourcecode for free software.
: -------------------------------------------
: New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
: -------------------------------------------
:
: Programmers wanted!
: Motivation
: ----------
: Unix popularity grows thanks to the free variants, mostly Linux. But still a
: consistant, nice looking free desktop-environment is missing. There are
: several nice either free or low-priced applications available, so that
: Linux/X11 would almost fit everybody needs if we could offer a real GUI.
Matthias,
I think that nice looking window managers are wonderful, but a
more worthwhile project for programmers in the Linux community would be to
create a FreeCDE system. I personally would much rather have a unified
print and drag-and-drop API than another pretty window manager.
BTW: I hope you will consider porting LyX over to Qt in the future, and I
hope that The Gimp will also join it in moving to more open libraries.
Kevin
was 'configuring your girlfriends' "box"' really that traumatic? <grin>
nall.
--
jonathan n. nall na...@cs.duke.edu
they say your eyes are the same color as they always were.
that kind of information just floors me...
http://www.duke.edu/~jnn/mountain_goats/mg.html
[...]
> I really recommand looking at this library. It has IMO the power to become
> the leading library for free software development. And it's a way to escape
> the TCL/TK monsters that try to slow down all our processors and eat up our
> memory...
>
[...]
> BTW2: You might wonder why I'm so against Tk. Well, I don't like the
> philosophy: Tk's doesn't have a textwidget, for example, but a slow
> wordprocessor. Same with other widgets. In combination with TCL the programs
> become slow and ugly (of course there are exceptions). I didn't yet see any
> application that uses Tk from C++ or C, although an API seems to exist.
> TCL/TK is very usefull for prototyping. Ideal for example for kernel
> configuration. And since Tk looks little similar to Motif, the widgets are
> also quite easy to use. But I really don't like any TCL/Tk application to
> stay permanantly on the desktop. And Qt is much easier (at least as easy) to
> program. Check it out!
>
Hi,
I just want to give a few comment on that.
Admittedly I'm tired of this TK-Monster-tale!
It's slow when you write the whole application in plain TCL,
but that's not how is was meant to be.
You actually can register C-procedures as TCL-commands
and call them directly from the interpreter (the only
overhead is the command-parsing at runtime).
You can also call evaluate small TCL-Scripts from within
C.
I wrote some middle sized TK-applications for a company using TCL
and TK. I used TCL only to glue (how John Osterhout calls it) my
C-routines together, which made the programs fast, and very
easy to maintain!
I think TCL/TK is one of the most reasonable paradigms for
GUI-devopment... We only miss a really GUI-builder :) !
(The speed has to be improved on windows, which is currently
in progress)
Granted, it's tempting to write the whole application in TCL/TK, and
some guys seem to have misunderstood the whole idea.
But then again, what do you want?
- you can write the whole thing in TCL which is easy but slow
- you can write the main parts in C or C++ and use TCL/TK only
for the GUI and non-time-critical portions, which is still easier
than Motif or QT and about as efficient!
Again, TCL/TK was designed as glue language for C or C++,
if you use it like that, it's the perfect solution!
If I had to vote what development tools to use for KDE, it most
certainly would be TCL/TK (used in an intelligent way...).
It is even worked on a window manager called TKWM,
which is basicly a TCL/TK interpreter with extra commands for
windows management (of course the new commands are written in C).
just my $0.02
Lars
> IMHO a GUI should offer a complete, graphical environment. It should allow a
> users to do his everyday tasks with it, like starting applications, reading
> mail, configuring his desktop, editing some files, delete some files, look
> at some pictures, etc. All parts must fit together and work together. A
> nice button with a nice "Editor"-icon isn't not at all a graphical user
> environment if it invokes "xterm -e vi". Maybe you have been disappointed
> long time ago too, when you installed X with a nice window manager, clicked
> on that beautiful "Help"-Icon ... chrk chrk (the hard disk)...an ugly,
> unsuable, weird xman appeared on the desktop :-(
Wow. That brings back memories of my first X experience. <shudder>
> Since a few weeks a really great new widget library is available free in
> source and price for free software development. Check out
> http://www.troll.no
Also check out http://www.mlsoft.com/xml/xml.html for some cool motif
add-ons.
The widget library is free for linux.
I seem to remember people working on the fvwm95 project also doing some
kind of integrated file manager that resembles the win95 file windows.
I think this included possible file-icons on the desktop.
My impression is that a bunch of people just recently realized that the
current linux/X situation really bites and they all decided to start
their own little projects. It would be nice to see people buckle down
and focus on one common project (like the KDE). I think this would add
a lot of value to linux. Good luck dude.
Brian
--Greg
Henning
--
Henning Brockfeld mailto: Broc...@wigeo.bwl.uni-muenchen.de
Institut f"ur Wirtschaftsgeographie Universit"at M"unchen
> It is even worked on a window manager called TKWM,
> which is basicly a TCL/TK interpreter with extra commands for
> windows management (of course the new commands are written in C).
Is TKWM still kicking around/maintained? If so, where can I find it?
James Bailie
Linux bigot,
in London, Ontario, Canada
------------------------------------------------
: was 'configuring your girlfriends' "box"' really that traumatic? <grin>
yes, unfortunatly :-( I needed several hours and the result isn't as
good as I expected. Anyway she now works with it but she doesn't really
believe my claims anymore that this system could sometime be something
for everybody. Well, one might argue that it's enough if Linux/X11 fits
for me. But as a computer-science student who will maybe end up as a
programmer (who knows) I really would like more marketshare for Unix
so that I will not have to write software for strange other systems.
Don't grin, this could happen to everybody. someday. ;)
Matthias
BTW: But I want a nice environment for myself, too, of course.
: nall.
: : -------------------------------------------
: : New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
: : -------------------------------------------
: :
: : Programmers wanted!
: : Motivation
: : ----------
: : Unix popularity grows thanks to the free variants, mostly Linux. But still a
: : consistant, nice looking free desktop-environment is missing. There are
: : several nice either free or low-priced applications available, so that
: : Linux/X11 would almost fit everybody needs if we could offer a real GUI.
: Matthias,
: I think that nice looking window managers are wonderful, but a
: more worthwhile project for programmers in the Linux community would be to
: create a FreeCDE system. I personally would much rather have a unified
: print and drag-and-drop API than another pretty window manager.
I'm not talking about yet-another window manager. I'm talking about
an Qt-based environment similar to the CDE. Qt yet doesn't have
a drag-and-drop API. I'm not sure when it will come. But of course
this would be a nice project. Join and do that API!
(as a sideeffect and for testing purpose maybe also the filemanager
comes out...)
: BTW: I hope you will consider porting LyX over to Qt in the future, and I
: hope that The Gimp will also join it in moving to more open libraries.
: Kevin
Greets,
Matthias
As far as I can remember Qt is free only for free software development.
So if a company wants to create a product on Linux, she'll have the
choice between:
1. Motif
2. Qt
Since both of them are Commercial products, it'll use Motif (standard).
Even if the Qt API is better...
--
Lokh.
"Famous remarks are very seldom quoted correctly."
- Simeon Strunsky
Pat> Matthias Ettrich (ett...@ti-ibm01.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de)
Pat> wrote: : I'm not talking about yet-another window manager. I'm
Pat> talking about : an Qt-based environment similar to the CDE. Qt
Pat> yet doesn't have : a drag-and-drop API. I'm not sure when it
Pat> will come. But of course : this would be a nice project. Join
Pat> and do that API! : (as a sideeffect and for testing purpose
Pat> maybe also the filemanager : comes out...)
Pat> As far as I can remember Qt is free only for free software
Pat> development. So if a company wants to create a product on
Pat> Linux, she'll have the choice between:
Pat> 1. Motif 2. Qt
Pat> Since both of them are Commercial products, it'll use Motif
Pat> (standard). Even if the Qt API is better...
If their primary target is Linux, I think they would rather use Qt
since they don't have to staticly link the gui lib in. Users can buy
the app and use it with the free Qt shared lib. Look at the problems
StarOffice has with Motif. Last time I checked, Lesstiff is only
source compatible with Motif. So Lesstiff can't solve the problems
Motif-based comercial apps since the only thing u get is a binary.
just my 0.02$
L.D.
--
=====================================================================
Linh Dang Nortel Technology
Member of Scientific Staff Speech Recognition Software
li...@nortel.ca
=====================================================================
Hi,
it has not been worked on since TK4.0, and even
this was only an alpha version.
Still it might be a good starting point!
Take a look ant Eric Schenks homepage:
http://www.cs.utoronto.ca/~schenk/
Lars
> Have you considered working with them?
>
Read his posting again. He is clearly differentiating a window manager from
a desktop environment. Afterstep is about looks but not functionality and
the KDE is primarily an approach for functionality.
We don't need good looks, but a homogeneous user interface. With all window
managers there is still such a heterogeneous way of handling your programs
that it stinks for the average end user. Afterstep is nice but it doesn't
make usage of an editor like 'vi' very convincable for the average user. And
have you ever seen and used a real NeXT box? That's what is called a GUI with
real functionality! Afterstep is still miles away from that although the
looks seem to be there - but that's all.
Regards, P. Seelig *8^)
--
Paul Seelig pse...@goofy.zdv.uni-mainz.de
African Music Archive - Institute for Ethnology and Africa Studies
Johannes Gutenberg-University - Forum 6 - 55099 Mainz/Germany
Our AMA Homepage in the WWW at http://www.uni-mainz.de/~bender/
This would also make configuration extremely easy, provide backwards
compatibility with the X Resource database, and leverage a hell of a lot
of existing code and extensions.
On the contrary, this is exactly what it should be able to do, only you
should also be able to change it to "xterm -e joe" or "textedit" or
"xemacs" or "KDEEdit" or "crisp", etc. If you do build an environment
like you describe, configurability has to be a part of it. Sure, you
might supply several good programs with it, but you shouldn't lock out
people's ability to use other programs *and* for them to fully replace
your programs. In other words, if every time your GUI wants the user to
edit a file, it pops up KDEEdit, even though the user prefers to and
does use pico everywhere else, that doesn't cut it. If the user wants
pico, the GUI should use pico *everywhere*. If you have a set of key
bindings in the GUI, the user should be able to reconfigure them. Why?
Maybe the user is used to a Macintosh and wants familiar bindings. Maybe
the user is missing a left hand and typing Ctrl-A is a royal pain. This,
by the way, means that reasonable backwards compatibility with other
programs needs to be maintained.
Summary, yes, by all means, build a standard system- it has been done
before (The Andrew Toolkit Springs to mind, as does OpenLook), but it
can be done better. But- allow people to deviate from that standard.
Their reasons may be much better than you think, and you cannot possibly
anticipate the needs of everyone.
Suggestion:
__________
BTW: Have you considered a scrapbook for storing scraps of cut and
pastage, Macintosh style? I hate the Mac interface, but it does have its
points, the scrapbook being one of them. An application that serves as a
clipboard that will store say, the last two or three copy actions would
also be helpful, allowing you to copy to and from the scrapbook as
desired.
One other thing: If you provide toolbars, (I'm sure you will) make a
configuration option where by you can display short text interpretations
(not just balloon help- balloon help is for slightly longer phrases)
either with or *instead of* the icons. I find icons can be a great
source of confusion with new users (just what *does* the picture of the
teddy bear mean?!?). It also helps with people that have low resolution,
monochrome, or crappy monitors where the pictures become unrecognizable.
Additionally some people don't have a lot of memory or a fast video card
(pixmaps take up a tremendous amount of memory in a highly graphical
interface- text takes up a lot less- easier on disk space too and much
easier to internationalize).
ME> IMHO a GUI should offer a complete, graphical environment. It should
ME> allow a users to do his everyday tasks with it, like starting
ME> applications, reading mail, configuring his desktop, editing some
ME> files, delete some files, look at some pictures, etc. All parts
ME> must fit together and work together.
Emacs, man! Emacs! :-)
ME> - Panel:
There are still some keys unbound!
ME> - Filemanager
Dired.
ME> - mail client
Gnus, you can also read News with it!
ME> - easy texteditor
Hell yeah!
ME> - Terminal
Shell mode.
ME> - Image viewer
Say `! display RET' in Dired.
ME> - Hypertext Help System
Texinfo.
--
Ralph * http://www.UL.BaWue.DE/~rs/
GNU -- vivat, crescat, floreat!
I think Henning has a point. Does anyone know what is the advantage
KDE has over GNUstep? KDE sounds like a face lift on some apps. If
that is the case, then it might be a worthwhile attempt. However, if
interoperability (aka drag and drop, OLE, Opendoc, whatever the
recent incarnation is) is desired, perhaps we should seriously look
farther ahead than a face lift. I fear that a face lift of the apps
will generate a lot of excitement that might take too long to complete,
and when it does finish, it would likely be superceded by other stuff
(e.g., CDE) making it look incomplete once again. I bring this up in
light of the uncertain fate that the X+free Unices world is coming to
at the end of the year.
The Unix world (at least the commercial Unix world) is tending towards
CDE+Motif, and soon when the Open Group takes over X, it will be
CDE+Motif+X, integrated (whatever that means). The Open Group has not
made Motif and CDE free, and when X is integrated with Motif and CDE, I
doubt if X will be free as we all know it now. Even if X remains free
and functional stand-alone, the free Unices community will lose much of
its attractive value (sorry, can't think of an appropriate word right
now) due to lack of CDE and Motif, making us look like the outsiders in
a "unified" (commercial) Unix world. Of course, I am sure that
XInside, Metro-X, and others will come up with commercial solutions for
many polular free Unices (some already offer CDE), but those will
most likely come at a dollar price, leave some not so popular free
Unices (or popular free Unices but on uncommon hardware) out in the
cold, and most of all, come with all kinds of strings attached--not
quite the "live free or die" Unix motto.
The Open Group has not announced the fate of X as yet. Since the
maintenance of X is to be handed over at the end of the year, one is
free to speculate what does that mean. Whatever it may be, I think we
should not count on Open Group to be a benevolent entity (it might be,
I don't know.. can anyone clarify this?) on a long term basis. Thus my
suggestion of a new direction in the form of GNUstep.
I am certain most people who have seen a NeXT box will agree that
OPENstep is a more elegant solution than CDE+Motif. It has ground-up
drag and drop (or whatever you prefer to call it), but most important
of all is that the specifications are really open which means that a
free version such as GNUstep can be implemented. Compare that to
CDE+Motif, you have to pay a fees to even get Motif on your box, it is
fat (Qt looks like a much better implementation in many ways, plus
Troll Tech is nice to hackers), CDE needs money as well (am I
correct?), and I would guess that Open Group will not endear itself to
the free Unix community. Money and big players and politics are
involved now, so technology usually take a back seat.
I think I have speculated enough. Anyone else has any other inputs
that more closely correspond to reality? :-) Corrections? Pointers?
Gurus? I think many can benefit from this discussion, don't keep us in
the dark! It would be great if a generally general agreement/concensus
can be arrived at so we all can have a direction to work towards.
Also, follow-up to comp.os.linux.advocacy, where it belongs.
Cheers,
e. (bracing for flame/fireballs/wand of death/etc.)
--
_______________________________________________________________________________
Edwin _Lim_ Aun Whei | U of Calif., Irvine | Never let truth stand in the
el...@dodo.eng.uci.edu | Mech & Aerospace Engr | way of pride.
He probably meant GNUstep, which is intended to be a complete GPLed
OpenStep replacement. You can find more information about AfterStep
at http://www.afterstep.org.
>--
> Paul Seelig pse...@goofy.zdv.uni-mainz.de
> African Music Archive - Institute for Ethnology and Africa Studies
> Johannes Gutenberg-University - Forum 6 - 55099 Mainz/Germany
> Our AMA Homepage in the WWW at http://www.uni-mainz.de/~bender/
--Arthur
Matthias Ettrich (ett...@ti-ibm03.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de) wrote:
>
> -------------------------------------------
> New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
> -------------------------------------------
[...]
I wouldn't like to see just another desktop development.
Linux gains popularity and respect by going conform to already existing
(open) standards. Why don't you/we call for support of the GnuStep project
if you/we don't like commercial desktops ?
This is a project to implement a desktop which is based on an open standard,
not bound to commercial Motif, possibly a little bit huge but very
functional and it goes the object oriented way, which will be a very
important criteria already in the near future.
There already exist implementations on NeXT and Solaris/Sparc.
See www.gnustep.org (Nort America) or
www.nmr.embl-heidelberg.de (Europe)
Martin.
--
EMail: I prefer correspondence to: Martin...@onyx.dirnet.com
If necessary, business mail can be sent to: Martin...@uni-duisburg.de
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unix _IS_ user friendly - it's just selective about who its friends are !
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Did you ever see a company whose primary target is Linux?
---Ingo
Yes, indeed, that is the fact. There exist (at least) the Linux
Interface Project (http://blank.pages.de/lip/subscribe.html for ml
information), OpenStep (a.k.a GNUstep), the Gtk group (with a slightly
different focus), a project of the Free Software Union, EZWGL and some
others I probably forgot.
And the dicussion is always the same. I have seen a posting from Warwick
Allison which boils down to a pretty good explanation of why people
choose Qt. He and I had some heated discussions about why _not_ to
choose Qt on the lip mailing list so if you need reasons for that, look
at the archive. I also traced the discussion that erupted once Peter
Mattis and Spencer Kimball announced their Gtk toolkit. It was
remarkably similiar to what I see here (e.g. "There are already many
good toolkits: Tk, XForms, Lesstif, Qt, etc").
The bottom line is, I'm rather tired now, from hearing the same
arguments again and again. I consider it especially interesting that
Matthias, for all the good has done otherwise, didn't even consider it
necessary to check if there are already any projects out which do what
he wants to do. I would be perfectly willing to take back my
suggestions, even if I consider them better, if that results in one
common project and I believe that many of the programmers currently with
the LIP are of the same opinion.
Unfortunately, many other people don't see the necessity to have one
common project. As long as that isn't the case, we will probably have to
just go along and chose among the things that evolve. This is rather
similiar to the way things have gone in the past with other standards
(TCP/IP for example) so this might not be the worst way to choose. I
fear, though, that it may be the slowest way to choose.
> It would be nice to see people buckle down
> and focus on one common project (like the KDE). I think this would add
> a lot of value to linux. Good luck dude.
I heartily agree. Lets get together folks and stop bitching.
---Ingo
There is at least one project I know of which is working on
building a GOOD gpl'd interface specifically for Linux (but
since it would be free, it would undoubtedly be ported, at least
to other Intel OSes). I think they named it LIP (Linux Interface
Project). If messing around with Linux has taught me anything,
it's that often what you need is out there, it's just a matter of
finding it, or at least assembling the parts.
Anyway, just wanted to let you know about LIP. I'm sure much more
useful data will be added, too, before the thread dies. Here you
can find how to contact the LIP people, get on the maillist, etc:
http://homepages.munich.netsurf.de/Michael.Dingler/lwp.html
I love the name (KDE), I'm sure as they think about/start to
do things in LIP, they could use a great ironic name like that.
Yes, plenty of objects to recieve TLAs ;)
Matthias Ettrich wrote:
>
> -------------------------------------------
> New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
> -------------------------------------------
>
> Programmers wanted!
>
> Motivation
> ----------
>
> Unix popularity grows thanks to the free variants, mostly Linux. But still a
> consistant, nice looking free desktop-environment is missing. There are
> several nice either free or low-priced applications available, so that
> Linux/X11 would almost fit everybody needs if we could offer a real GUI.
...
Now, eagerly going to reading your post in its entirety,
--
Bryan Seigneur
/ / inux
/ /__ink ==> http://www.sonetech.com/~bry/linmarks.html
/____/ist
> Did you ever see a company whose primary target is Linux?
Caldera?
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
Trying to outsmart a compiler defeats the purpose of using one.
--- Brian Kernighan & P. J. Plauger, *The Elements of Programming Style*
Why not just contribute to the development of GNU Teak?
--
James Youngman VG Gas Analysis Systems |The trouble with the rat-race
Before sending advertising material, read |is, even if you win, you're
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/47/227.html|still a rat.
Or LST, SuSE, Redhat, whatever. Yeah, sure, all those distributions have
Linux as their primary targets. I have nevers seen anyone of them
producing an office application, though.
The bottom line is: I am opposed to the "We are Linux, we don't need the
rest of the world" statements that have been voiced in this group. It
can never be wrong if something runs over many platforms.
---Ingo Luetkebohle
Good thought! What is the point of further fragmenting the Linux community on
selecting a GUI when an superior design is well along in being ported to
Linux?
One additional point to be made about GNUStep is that framworks are based on
objective C, a dynamically typed and dynamically bound language (and part of
the normal GNU gcc/g++ distribution). It is far simpler to do high quality OO
programming in objective c than in C++. It also subsumes all of C and can be
used in code along with legacy C++. And, of course, as the GNU moniker
indicates, GNUStep is GPL'd.
Peter Koren
pko...@gte.net home Linux Box `:-)
pko...@ti.com work WIN NT :-(
If it's not GPL ... I'm againist it!
Your going to run in to the same hassles as with
Motif eventually. Just use lesstif or write your
own widget library.
Best / Worst case scenario:
Your project is a wild success to the point no
one wants to run Linux without it. However, you're
still tied to a proprietary solution and your can't
use it with other commercial UN|Xs without paying....
I think that's a bad place to be and would only
serve to undermine the concept of Linux as being
total free from licenses.
It's quite un-GNU...
--
Rick Niles.
: I just want to give a few comment on that.
: Admittedly I'm tired of this TK-Monster-tale!
: It's slow when you write the whole application in plain TCL, but that's not
: how is was meant to be.
: You actually can register C-procedures as TCL-commands and call them
: directly from the interpreter (the only overhead is the command-parsing at
: runtime). You can also call evaluate small TCL-Scripts from within C.
[...]
: Granted, it's tempting to write the whole application in TCL/TK, and
: some guys seem to have misunderstood the whole idea.
: But then again, what do you want?
: - you can write the whole thing in TCL which is easy but slow
You can write the whole thing in Scheme, which is easier and faster. ;)
(or Python, or Perl5, or any of the other languages that work with Tk.)
--
Grant Edwards | Microsoft isn't the | Yow! There's a little
Rosemount Inc. | answer. Microsoft | picture of ED MCMAHON doing
| is the question, and | BAD THINGS to JOAN RIVERS in
gra...@rosemount.com | the answer is no. | a $200,000 MALIBU BEACH
| HOUSE!!
And watch it die. Qt wins big over Motif in that it is possible to get
free copies, even though they've got rather restrictive licensing terms
for them. And it is reportedly portable so that you can migrate apps
from one platform to Windows, if need be.
>I think that's a bad place to be and would only
>serve to undermine the concept of Linux as being
>total free from licenses.
Linux isn't free from licenses. On any given distribution, you'll find
licenses galore, from the GPV through the BSD license and all the way to
the MIT license.
____
david parsons \bi/ o...@pell.chi.il.us
\/
[..]
FAN> Best / Worst case scenario: Your project is a wild success to
FAN> the point no one wants to run Linux without it. However,
FAN> you're still tied to a proprietary solution and your can't use
FAN> it with other commercial UN|Xs without paying....
When did you read the Qt license? Free for machines running X Window
system it says.
FAN> I think that's a bad place to be and would only serve to
FAN> undermine the concept of Linux as being total free from
FAN> licenses.
FAN> It's quite un-GNU...
Yes, let's make Linux license free: drop GPL, Linux as freeware!
Lgb
> One additional point to be made about GNUStep is that framworks are based on
> objective C, a dynamically typed and dynamically bound language (and part of
> the normal GNU gcc/g++ distribution).
Is it just me, or is anybody else wary of a philosophy that is implicitly
tied to One True Language (be that Objective C, C++, Java, ...)?
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
[I believe] that science is one of the primary art forms of the 20th century.
--- Steve Roy
> Or LST, SuSE, Redhat, whatever. Yeah, sure, all those distributions have
> Linux as their primary targets. I have nevers seen anyone of them
> producing an office application, though.
I quoted Caldera especially because they *don't* produce a Linux
distribution. They use somebody else's distribution and add stuff that
they have (had) ported to Linux, such as WordPerfect etc. In my book,
this is `having Linux as a primary target' without just being yet another
distributor.
> The bottom line is: I am opposed to the "We are Linux, we don't need the
> rest of the world" statements that have been voiced in this group. It
> can never be wrong if something runs over many platforms.
Hear, hear.
Personally, I'd be inherently suspicious of anything calling itself
`Linux-something'. If it's not worth being made to run on any Unix, it's
not worth being done for Linux, IMHO. (This may exclude some things that
need to go far down into the kernel.)
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
If you think of C as a preprocessor for the PDP-11 assembler, it makes a
lot more sense. --- Reid Kneeland
Short Summary:
The point to make here is that GNUstep makes use of some
concepts that come easily with the "Objective" component of
Objective-C, but are very hard to implement in other langages.
GNUstep is not really dependent on C as a language. It is just
that GNUstep is dependent on some "Objective" features that are
not easily simulated in other, more restrictive languages.
Objective-C has some features that come in very handy when you
have to implement containers or widgets. On the other hand
these very concepts are seen as Evil [tm] by other schools of
OOP. It's SIMULA vs. Smalltalk people, again.
GNUstep _can_ be used with any OOP language, _if_ that language
can
- make method invocations variable at run-time.
- can derive classes from superclasses without recompilation of
the superclass and without needing the source of the
superclass.
- can ask any object of that class for its class name, the
names and types of all instance variables and the names and
signatures of all methods of this class and all its
superclasses at run-time.
Objective-C _can_ be used with C. It does not even need a
extern "C"-directive as C++ does.
The "Objective" component of "Objective-C" is completely
independent of its "C" component (in syntax as well as in
semantics) and can be applied to almost any other language. In
fact Nextsteps "Objective-C" compiler is in reality an
"Objective-C++" compiler, if you want it to be. There are
"Objective"-dialects of other languages, too. Among them are
regular programming languages such as COBOL, Fortran and other
and script languages such as perl and Tcl.
Longer explaination: Objective-C, like Smalltalk, binds methods
by name, not by pointer. In Objective-C a method call is in
essence a much more efficicent way of doing something roughly
like this
struct method {
char *name;
void *func;
};
method method_table_for_somefunc[] {
{ "doit", doit },
{ "another_method", another_method },
{ NULL, NULL }
}
send_message_to_func(char *msg, ...) {
int p;
for (p=0; method_table_for_somefunc[p].name; p++) {
if (strcmp(msg, method_table_for_somefunc[p].name) == 0)
break;
}
if (method_table_for_somefunc[p].name == NULL)
signal_error();
else
(*(clever_cast)method_table_for_somefunc[p].func)(self,...);
}
In reality the compiler generates a hash value from the method
name and the lookup name->address is done without looping. The
new keyword @selector("somestring") which is evaluated at
compile-time like sizeof() returns the hash-value of type SEL
for the given string.
This breaks typing at compile time, but Objective-C has other
ways of determining types and names at run-time. For those guys
from the we-want-to-prove-our-programs department this is bad
news and so they see Objective-C (and Smalltalk) as evil
things that can never work as exspected (Well, they do work and
they even scale...).
So in Objective-C you can send a fixed message to a single
object: [ myObject mymessage ]. In this example, the method
(member function) "mymessage" of "myObject" is called. This is
nothing spectacular.
You can also make the object variable, which is still common in
other languages:
id anObject;
int length, i;
length = [ myList count ]; // Determine the number of objects in my list
for (i=0; i<length; i++) {
// Determine the object at position i in the list
anObject = [ myList objectAt: i ];
// Call the method "mymessage" of this object
[ anObject mymessage ];
// shorter:
// [[ myList objectAt: i ] mymessage ];
}
But in Objective-C you can also make the method variable.
Objective-C objects understand the method [ someObject perform:
someSelector ] where someSelector is any selector, even a
variable of type SEL. So constructs like
SEL aSelector;
int length, i;
length = [ myList count ];
for (i=0; i<length; i++)
[[ myList objectAt: i ] perform: aSelector ];
are valid, useful and common in Objective-C. Similar things are
usually much harder in C++ and Java. You could even improve the
above iterator to
for (i=0; i<length; i++) {
anObject = [ myList objectAt: i ];
if ([anObject respondsTo: aSelector ])
[ anObject perform: aSelector ];
}
which only applies aSelector to those objects that actually
implement a method for this selector.
Now you could implement a class List or Array which stores
elements of type id (id is a shorthand notation for (Object *),
which is a pointer to an Object or any class derived from
Object) and you could implement a method "makeObjectsPerform:
(SEL) aSelector" in List, which is basically the loop shown
above.
This is a completely generic container class: It can store any
kind of objects. It can even be (horrors!) heterogenous and
store Windows, Buttons, Checkbooks and Stones in the same list.
This container class can apply any method to all of its
objects.
Note that this never involves any recompiling. List can be
compiled and stashed away in some library in 1988, the source
file can be lost (or not be sold to me). This List class can
still store objects I write today and can send them messages I
invented yesterday. I can derive classes from List without need
for Lists source. To some extent I can even abandon the header
file for List, because most of it can be reconstructed from the
runtime information stored within List.o. Obviously, #defines,
typedefs, enums and so on are lost, though, because they are C
and not Objective.
So why is this name-bindung business useful for something like
GNUstep, a GUI class library framework? Well, imagine some
Button class which implements an on-screen button that can be
pushed with a mouse. What method should be called when the
button is pressed and to which class does this method belong?
To be sufficiently general the button must be useable with any
application I might come up with in the future. Of course the
Button class should not be recompiled just because I wanted to
use it in some application of mine or because I want to
subclass it. So each instance of Button has two variables, one
called "target" of type id and one called "action" of type SEL.
And when you press that button,
if ([ target respondsTo: action ])
[ target perform: action ];
This button is general and can be used anywhere withour source
and recompilation. Yeah, and a more complex view which is made
up from many Buttons, ScrollViews is put on screen with
[[ myView elementList ] makeObjectsPerform: @selector(display) ];
Now think of an interface builder program that has some palette
of builtin GUI element classes such as Buttons, ScrollViews,
TextFields and so on. This IB should be useful with YOUR
selfmade GUI element classes as well without recompiling and
relinking the entire IB. Fortunately you are using ELF and have
the ability to dynamically load additional code.
So you load and link your selfmade GUI elements into your IB.
But how can the IB program be sure that what it just loaded is
a proper and conforming GUI element? Well, it simply asks the
new Class or its objects with "respondsTo: (SEL) aSelector" if
they respond to the proper messages. There is additional
support for such tests in the Objective-C language that allows
one to define a protocol (a set of methods) and any object can
be asked if it conforms to that protocol with "conformsTo:".
This is almost the same as asking for the presence every method
of this protocol with "respondsTo:".
So you can have your 1988 commercial GUI builder for which you
have never seen source, have it load some 1993 GUI palette you
have bought from another independent vendor and use this to
interface with your 1996 selfmade program.
And, additional plus, you can have your IB test drive your
applications GUI by simulating the still unwritten classes of
your future application with some
no-operation-understand-anything Classes without the need to
compile anything. This allows you to play around with
application interfaces without having any application specific
code, yet.
Note that those parts of your application that already have
code ARE working in this test drive simulation. So if you don't
write any code at all, but use only existent objects, you can
create proper applications within your IB without ever touching
a compiler. Yes, this is useful. I have done this and the
resulting application was performing useful and nontrivial
tasks (Implementing a simple Master-Detail-View into a database
by joining several tables, sorting this tables by varying
criteria and printing the result to some postscript printer.
The application featured Nextstep AppKit objects for the GUI
and Nextstep DBKit objects for the database and no selfmade
code. I sold it.).
What is the price of all this?
Performance Price:
Well, they say that C++ virtual function calls are factor two
slower than C function calls and that Objective-C messages are
factor six slower that C function calls, so Objective-C method
invocations are three times as slow as C++ method function
invocations. Note that this is ONLY for method invocations. All
plain statements are equally fast in all three languages - a
simple for(i=0; i<100000; i++) is equally fast in all three
languages. Objective-C programs are NOT three times as slow as
C++ programs.
Note that you need not pay the price for Objective-C method
invocation if you don't want to: You can ask any Object for its
method function pointers and call them repeatedly directly,
which is just as fast as in C.
Note that this is seldom necessary, too. My machine is a
Nextstation 68040 @ 25 MHz and its entire operating systems
down to vital parts of the device drivers is written in
Objective-C with all on-screen drawing going through a
Postscript interpreter. While this machine is not the fastest
thing in the world, it is fast enough for all daily tasks. I
never needed to resort to function pointers in my whole
Nextstep existence.
Compiler Price:
It is possible to construct method invocations in Objective-C
that generate runtime errors and that cannot be detected
automatically by the compiler. Thus, Objective-C is not
statically type-safe.
Note that this does not mean that Objective-C is untyped. Each
Objective-C object has exactly one exactly determined type and
you can ask this object for its type at any time. You need not
do that, though, and so it is theoretically possible for you to
construct programs that break.
In practice that does not turn out to be a problem. Large and
very large projects have been done in Objective-C and without
pain. Objective-C and Nextstep are targetted for and used for
mission critical applications, mainly in the banking and
insurance business and they perform well.
Kristian
--
Kristian Koehntopp, Wassilystrasse 30, 24113 Kiel, +49 431 688897
"Aeh, habe ich jetzt jemanden gespoilt, weil ich geschrieben habe das die
3.Staffel ein Ende hat?" -- Anja Ahlfeld, de.rec.sf.babylon5
I gave OS/2 the boot and abhor MS WIN* in part because of their growing (and
almost now total) reliance on a GUI interface.
I run HPUX here at work, and NEVER make use of the GUI features other than
having an occasional icon on the desktop to start a common application.
The day Linux requires a GUI as its main interface will be the day I abandon
it as well.
Early man started with simple cave drawings and after thousands of years
evolved to a rich and powerful interface known as words. Now everyone wants
to return to our primitive past. I guess history DOES repeat itself.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe Smulowicz Hewlett-Packard Tel: 508-659-3760
jo...@an.hp.com Mailstop 450, 3000 Minuteman Road Fax: 508-685-3577
Andover, Massachusetts 01810
PGP fingerprint: 50 EA 8B 22 A0 59 60 D5 DD 4B 04 04 12 26 2E 16
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's a good point. Qt may be free, as in no cost, but it doesn't
quite fit the ideal GNU sense of freedom.
Nate:SCHCATS!
(defun display-image-in-buffer (file)
"Puts the image contained in the file in the current buffer"
(interactive "f")
(let ((IT (make-glyph-internal))) ;; IT, a la Stephen King
(set-glyph-property IT 'image file) ;; not as in ITaly
(make-annotation IT nil 'text)))
> ME> - Hypertext Help System
> Texinfo.
M-x all-hail-xemacs
I have to admit, though, that XEmacs is not neccessarily the perfect
solution for *all* GUI problems. Something along the lines of a free
CDE implementation would probably help Linux in becoming more widely
accepted.
Markus
>I wouldn't like to see just another desktop development.
>Linux gains popularity and respect by going conform to already existing
>(open) standards. Why don't you/we call for support of the GnuStep project
>if you/we don't like commercial desktops ?
I'd second that!
>This is a project to implement a desktop which is based on an open standard,
>not bound to commercial Motif, possibly a little bit huge but very
>functional and it goes the object oriented way, which will be a very
>important criteria already in the near future.
>There already exist implementations on NeXT and Solaris/Sparc.
>See www.gnustep.org (Nort America) or
>www.nmr.embl-heidelberg.de (Europe)
The computer industry seem unanimous in the opinion that the NeXTstep
GUI is very well designed and is light years ahead of other unix
interfaces. The Gnustep project will create a platform where
everything is laid down, even the size of icons (if I read it
correctly). Also, and perhaps more importantly, it will provide the
development tools to create the user apps.
The Motif/CDE might well become the commercial standard but it's
possible that a free unix standard based around Gnustep could take
off. As it stands at the moment, NeXTstep has a better GUI than the
CDE (IMHO, naturally). The KDE sounds good but it would be sad to see
so much time and effort being put into a project that is already up
and running.
Jules
Everybody in this thread should pick up a copy of the November 1996 Linux
Journal and read the Qt article written by one of the Co-founders of Troll
Tech. Their gist is simple:
* They Like X11/Linux. In fact they develop Qt on it and port it to other
platforms from there.
* They promote freeware for the X11/Linux platform.
* They want to make money (don't we all? ;-)
So the upshot is that Qt is freely distributable with source code for X11/Unix
based platforms, and commercial gotta pay for others (especially M$).
For Linux/FreeBSD the license is equivalent to GNU's. And it seems to me that
the only reason one of us would port an app to M$ Windows is for the sole
purpose of making money. So Troll Tech should get a cut.
I'm satisfied with Troll Tech position and plan to write a test app or three
in Qt now that I have a article with some cookbook examples.
You don't have to pay to get Qt on your Linux box. You get the source code. You
have to pay for Motif. You don't get the source code for it (unless you pay
the huge bucks...). Troll Tech looks like a GNU outfit, and talks like a GNU
outfit (on Unix platforms). So why should we not treat them like a GNU outfit
and use their stuff?
BAJ
--
Another random extraction from the mental bit stream of...
Byron A. Jeff - PhD student operating in parallel - And Using Linux!
Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332 Internet: by...@cc.gatech.edu
No-one is talking about making Linux require a GUI - rather, providing an
option for those who want one. Preferably an option which fits in nicely
with the existing CLI stuff.
IOW - you don't like GUI's, and you don't want to use one. Bully for you.
Others do like them. This isn't an either-or situation.
This project has the potential to make Linux a win-win platform for GUI/CLI.
--
Matt McLeod "Bill spent his whole time trying to be
System Administrator argumentative and not trying to come up
Hunter Network Association with solutions." [Ed Roberts on Bill Gates]
> -------------------------------------------
> New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
> -------------------------------------------
>
> Programmers wanted!
Freedom Software would be willing to contribute with
the source code of Freedom Desktop Light for this effort.
Please don't subestimate the task of building a
desktop manager. Several Years have been spent building
Freedom Desktop. We could also contribute with
other pieces of technology (i.e Freedom Rt - Object oriented
toolkit). For more information about Freedom Desktop,
please visit http://www.fsw.com
Freedom Software is about to announce a free version
of the software for Linux (personal use only). This version
is called Freedom Desktop Light for Linux.
If I were you, I wouldn't restrict the project to a specific
toolkit (at least for now). There are many pieces of public
software that can be reused easily. It could take a long
time to rebuild everything from scratch. Try to reuse
the more you can now. You can standarize on a single
toolkit later.
Also keep in mind that Motif is the defacto standard.
Most Unix platform ship with Motif. It would be nice
if your desktop work on all the versions of Unix
Edgar Galvis
Freedom Software
http://www.fsw.com/motif.html - Home of Freedom Desktop for Motif
sup...@freedom.lm.com
You're not alone there. OTOH, with a reasonably reusable design
in your app, being written in an OOP language (be it C++/ObjC/Java),
you could easily interface with many GUIs. I keep telling this until
I'm mad, I believe.
The key is writing reusable soft (not one tied to a specific interface)
and porting it to the yet-another-new-and-fancy GUI which has the
most audience/support now. Oh well then, why not unite on just
*this* project: build a C++ framework for general Linux apps with
interfaces to Tk/Motif/Qt/GNUstep/your favourite GUI.
Bored,
ralf
--
Lynx-enhanced pages at http://www.bayreuth-online.de/~stephan
Matthias pointed out that he wants to create an
End-User-GUI. Although emacs is a very complex and
powerful editor, it's not easy to use for so called
End-Users. And it's not that what an End-User expects
as a GUI.
BTW, why call it KDE when it could be called LDE
(Linux Desktop Environment ?) ;-)
Uli
--
Uli Kaage - u...@anna.sub.de
(... agree with the emacs comments - it *IS* the answer to everything, but
not for the newbie...)
> BTW, why call it KDE when it could be called LDE
> (Linux Desktop Environment ?) ;-)
Because whatever these KDE people come up with would (should) be runnable
on any Unix system without too much trouble... be it Linux, FreeBSD, or
some commercial OS. Branding it "linux-only" would make it a less
attractive alternative and restrict the possibilites for world
domination (or whatever their goals are :).
--
Edwin Huffstutler http://www.primenet.com/~edwinh/
edw...@primenet.com Linux - because reboots are for hardware changes
eh...@sedona.intel.com SPG Logic Engineering, Intel Corp.
And if it's based on Qt you should be able to move large chunks of it over
to the million tonne elephant that's parked outside the front door. This
is good; once you've got similar UIs on the, ahem, excellent operating
systems from the PC world, it will be easier to wean them over to Unix.
JR> The computer industry seem unanimous in the opinion that the NeXTstep
JR> GUI is very well designed and is light years ahead of other unix
JR> interfaces. The Gnustep project will create a platform where
JR> everything is laid down, even the size of icons (if I read it
JR> correctly). Also, and perhaps more importantly, it will provide the
JR> development tools to create the user apps.
BTW: Is there a www page where I can't check out the look of a
GNUstep application? The GNUstep homepage contains much information
but not a single picture of an application.
--
Karsten Weiss
-
UUCP: kar...@addx.au.s.shuttle.de FIDONET: 2:246/1416.37
STUDBOX: knw...@studbox.uni-stuttgart.de GERNET: 21:492/1616.37
INTERNET: knw...@trick.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de >ASK FOR PGP KEY<
> : : New Project: Kool Desktop Environment (KDE)
> I'm not talking about yet-another window manager. I'm talking about
> an Qt-based environment similar to the CDE. Qt yet doesn't have
> a drag-and-drop API. I'm not sure when it will come. But of course
> this would be a nice project. Join and do that API!
> (as a sideeffect and for testing purpose maybe also the filemanager
> comes out...)
Of course the 20.000th filemanager! Why not wasting time with things
that already exist.
A GUI is an absolut personal decision. I take what I think it is nixe
and usefull. I expect you writing a "Kool" program so far you think that
it is "Kool". But THAT is the problem! A really great GUI does not force
the user to use a special look an feel! But all existing GUIs do this.
And your project will create the next one!
A really great GUI does not define weather a button is rectangular or
round!
It must be possible to change the outfit of the GUI like the colors of
the desktop. If you want to write something great, write that!
Beside that the process of creating a program and using a program must
be the same! A GUI-program should be an example of how this program
could look like and the user has to be able to change the outfit at all.
It must be possible to move the buttons to other places in a dialog-box.
It must be possible the create new different dialog-boxes with the
dialog-elements from the existing. It must be possible to join
dialog-boxes and frames in the way the user likes it. If you want to
write something great, write that!
-- bis später...
- Sascha ---<~>=( http://www.ping.de/sites/aibon/ )=<~>---
() Free speech online
/\ http://www.eff.org/BlueRibbon/bluehtml.html
AAH! Don't *do* that. <shudder>
l8r,
- jOhAnN
--
Johann Hibschman
joh...@physics.berkeley.edu
Seems reasonable on the face of it, but the only program I know about
which uses this technique AND WORKS is emacs. Since emacs is hardly
an example of brilliant OO/GUI design, I tend to be skeptical of the
whole idea.
--Arnt
Calling it LDE would not constitute a restriction to the rest
of the Un*x world. Especially since Linux is a kind of Un*x.
This name only states that it's a desktop-environment from a
Linux-Box where its development first started.
I think, if it becomes a good GUI no one would care about its origin.
If it's usefull it will be used.
But please don't take that LDE-suggestion that serious ... 8-)))
ME> - Image viewer
>> Say `! display RET' in Dired.
MG> (defun display-image-in-buffer (file)
MG> "Puts the image contained in the file in the current buffer"
MG> (interactive "f")
MG> (let ((IT (make-glyph-internal))) ;; IT, a la Stephen King
MG> (set-glyph-property IT 'image file) ;; not as in ITaly
MG> (make-annotation IT nil 'text)))
And for all those young, hep kids who only know about `click and pray'
instead of learning the proper way doing things:
(defun mouse-display-image-in-buffer (event)
"Puts the image you click on in the current buffer."
(interactive "e")
(let (file)
(save-excursion
(set-buffer (window-buffer (posn-window (event-end event))))
(save-excursion
(goto-char (posn-point (event-end event)))
(setq file (dired-get-filename))))
(select-window (posn-window (event-end event)))
(display-image-in-buffer file)))
The thread is about GUIs, isn't it? ;-)
Actually it sounds very similar to the GUI portion of the Berlin project.
Have you considered working with them?
http://veda.synet.net/numan/berlin/ is the URL for more info
--
Michael Dillon - ISP & Internet Consulting
Memra Software Inc. - Fax: +1-604-546-3049
http://www.memra.com - E-mail: mic...@memra.com
And ka11ing 1t Koo1 is 1ess of a turn-0ff?
--
James Youngman VG Gas Analysis Systems |The trouble with the rat-race
Before sending advertising material, read |is, even if you win, you're
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/47/227.html|still a rat.
Just the effect I was looking for! Seeing the phrase "Kool Desktop
Environment" sends a shiver down my spine.
>Just the effect I was looking for! Seeing the phrase "Kool Desktop
>Environment" sends a shiver down my spine.
Matthias only used that as a working title. If you can come up with
something better, he's very open for suggestions. It would be a shame
if people were turned off only by the name.
Greets,
Asger Alstrup
In my opinion this would turn back the wheel. Why do you need to
change the appearance of a program? The user interface is designed to
reflect the internal state of the program. If the user interface is
designed adequate, there's no need to add more an more stuff or to
change the layout of it's widgets. You can't improve the functionality
of such a program by doing things like that.
There were times, when nearly every little software-firm had their own
view of GUIs. Some thought the style of a button would be great for
headlines. Others implemented text-fields as labels. Diversity is not
always the best. That's the good thing with Windows or MACs GUI: If
you are familiar to the outfit of one program, it's easy to use all
others.
So, a generalized GUI makes life a lot easier and let's you focus on
the really important part of using a program: Make the program what
you want, not make it look like you want.
bis sp"atestens ... Uli
>In my opinion this would turn back the wheel. Why do you need to
>change the appearance of a program?
You don't, but the user might. That's why you set up preferences
and let the user play around until they're happy with the way their
UI looks. And if you build this sort of configurability in, you
don't need to worry about supporting a program that's been hacked
into bloody gobbets by someone customising their code.
(What I left unsaid is that preferences need to function across ALL
of the applications that talk to your UI; if the user makes buttons
look like hot dogs, then _every_ button should look like a hot dog,
not just the buttons in the app that they just called up preferences
in.)
> >In my opinion this would turn back the wheel. Why do you need to
> >change the appearance of a program?
>
> You don't, but the user might. That's why you set up preferences
> and let the user play around until they're happy with the way their
> UI looks. And if you build this sort of configurability in, you
> don't need to worry about supporting a program that's been hacked
> into bloody gobbets by someone customising their code.
>
> (What I left unsaid is that preferences need to function across ALL
> of the applications that talk to your UI; if the user makes buttons
> look like hot dogs, then _every_ button should look like a hot dog,
> not just the buttons in the app that they just called up preferences
> in.)
I disagree. The user (or the guru who is handsomely paid to configure
the machine for the user 8^)) should be able to decide independently
which apps have hot-dog buttons.
When I (finally) convinced my wife that fighting with WP-5.1 was no
longer worth the effort, that she could get better font support using
WP-6.1 and Winders-3.1, she insisted that the background be blue, since
that was what she was used to. I had no choice but to make all the
active windows have a blue background -- she didn't mind, but I thought
it looked ugly. It should have been possible to set WP's background to
blue, and leave the others alone. Same thing here.
--
David L. Johnson dl...@lehigh.edu, dl...@netaxs.com
Department of Mathematics http://www.lehigh.edu/~dlj0/dlj0.html
Lehigh University
14 E. Packer Avenue (610) 758-3759
Bethlehem, PA 18015-3174
Anyway, I keep my point of view: Perhaps we, the unix users, are used
to configure everything that comes along the desktop. This really
takes a lot of time, that is better spent on the more important tasks.
I'm not talking about hacked GUIs. The phrase *let the user **play**
around until they're happy with the way their UI looks* makes it all
clear.
You wouldn't go to a car seller and say: *I want a car with the
gas-pedal on the left and the tachometer in the luggage-boot*, wouldn't
you 8-) ? But on some things you are definitely right. Some little things
should be configurable by the user: colors, for example. Maybe,
color-blind people would need to change them. And that's another reason
for the usefulness of GUIs. If you need to change the color, it should
be take effect for every program that you use.
Maybe I'm going to far-off of this thread. I just wanted to make
clear, that a standardized GUI would be very useful for the end-users.
CU ... Uli
> The computer industry seem unanimous in the opinion that the NeXTstep
> GUI is very well designed and is light years ahead of other unix
> interfaces.
nextstep *was* light years ahead of everybody else eight years ago.
However, it was so wildly proprietary (we had to install paper
shredders *inside* a locked door, behind *another* electronic
badge-reader door, as well as motion detectors attached to a keypad
with secret codes) that it simply never took off, and X11 became
popular in the unix community instead. (This is a tad of IBM AIX
circa 1987-1988 history; X11 and NeXT were both plan B's because IBM
couldn't get NeWS).
It didn't help that Sun was tight-assed about NeWS. If it had given
away NeWS the way it gave away NFS and RPC's, the X Window System
would be a minor, forgotten footnote in academic computing history.
I guess that Java proves that they can learn from thier mistakes.
The folks at NeXT, appearently, cannot.
--linas
Rather more useful would be to combine the two approaches. All apps have
hot-dog buttons, except those that are set explicitly to have hamburger
buttons instead.
If my understanding of the discussions on the KDE mailing-list is correct,
this is the kind of thing that'll happen (although not with stuff like
button-shapes - fonts and colours mostly) - a set of customisable system
defaults (both at the system and user level) for fonts/colours, and a set of
customizable app options (also at the system and user level), all handled by
a utility class that'll be used in most KDE apps.
--
Matt McLeod "Bill spent his whole time trying to be
System Administrator argumentative and not trying to come up
Hunter Network Association with solutions." [Ed Roberts on Bill Gates]
---==O Check out KDE at http://suburbia.net/~octavian/kde/ O==---
This is what those "portable" C++ frameworks are supposed to do
(Amulet, wxWindows, V, YACL, etc.), right?
But this means that the end user will have to get the source code to
your program and compile it himself and link it with the toolkit he wishes to
use. Having options is always a good thing, but I think the idea here to have
all Linux programs (which follow the KDE specification) standardized on a
particular look and feel. Yes, this actually means forcing the programmer to
conform to a particular standard ... but control in this case is a good thing.
This is why MS apps are generally easy to interact with ... they all look the
same.
--
===============================================================================
Arcadio Alivio Sincero, Jr.
Sophomore, Computer Science Major at the University of Maryland at College Park
Amateur competitive bodybuilder
Email: lo...@wam.umd.edu, WWW: <coming soon to a web site near you!>
"D.A.R.E. .... to keep cops off donuts."
I disagree. If you had to interact with all Linux programs in the same
fashion, it would be easier for the novice to get up to speed with the
application. This is why MS Winders and Mac apps are generally called
"easy-to-use". All the apps on those platforms look and feel the same!
The current situtation with Linux now is that you can have several
different GUIs sitting on your X desktop at once. For the Linux veteran, this
is no big deal. But for the novice, this is a nightmare. Commerical unices
have adopted Motif as the standard look and feel. Linux also needs a standard.
>Calling it LDE would not constitute a restriction to the rest
>of the Un*x world. Especially since Linux is a kind of Un*x.
Yeah, maybe call it "Desktop For White Men", and since white men are a kind of
human, and so all of mankind will use it!
--
Warwick
Sheez I love USENET
--
_-_|\ war...@cs.uq.edu.au ---------------------------------------
/ * <- Comp Sci Department, Hackers do it with fewer instructions
\_.-._/ Univ. of Queensland, ---------------------------------------
v Brisbane, Australia. URL: http://student.uq.edu.au/~s002434
> The current situtation with Linux now is that you can have several
>different GUIs sitting on your X desktop at once. For the Linux veteran, this
>is no big deal. But for the novice, this is a nightmare. Commerical unices
>have adopted Motif as the standard look and feel. Linux also needs a standard.
Commercial systems have (mostly) adopted three things: X, Motif, and
CDE. The first of those is freely available, and Linux has it. The
last is also freely available, at least according to the info I got at
Uniforum. So, all we should need is a free Motif clone in order to have
access to all the software developed for standard UNIX environments.
And of course, LessTif is in development.
So, unless the CDE licensing has changed recently, I'm not sure why we
need a non-standard, incompatible alternative which won't run the
standard office apps that many people want, and which wil further
fragment and confuse the UNIX market. I mean, even if KDE were to
appear tomorrow, how long would it be till WordPerfect and Netscape
would be willing to target it? Some people have expressed doubt about
CDE. So what? If you want a standard, there it is. If you don't want
a standard, there are plenty of alternatives already. All the way up to
the mish-mosh that most people currently have.
Once we _have_ the standard tools available, _then_ it might be good to
look into trying to come up with something better. Linux doesn't ALSO
need a standard, Linux needs to BE standard, but better! At the moment,
we have LessTif (incomplete) and GNUstep (incomplete). Not to mention
WINE (incomplete). Adding another incomplete incompatible system to the
mess is going to make things worse, not better.
Sure, it's more fun to design something new and spiffy. Actually making
it work, making it complete, and getting all the bugs out is a lot less
fun. But things that work and are complete are a lot more likely to
attract users than great concepts which don't and aren't. KDE smells a
lot like pure concept to me. Finishing LessTif and GNUstep may not
sound as sexy, but I think it would be a whole lot more useful.
I'm not too big on the free Motif clone idea. Motif already exists
and you can buy it for a reasonable price. Any clone will have
incompatibilities and features (read bugs) different from Motif and
that detracts from it's attractiveness. I believe it is in the
best interest of the Linux community to support vendors who make
commercial products available in a Linux release. That means
buying products such as Motif, Netscape and the many other fine
products out there already. It is only through the availability of
commercial products that Linux will really gain acceptance on a
broader scale (read kicking MS butt). We must have standarization to
ease the porting process of these products to Linux which increases
the attractiveness of Linux to commercial developers. The other
gotcha is, of course, that the Linux market must exist. People must
purchase the products that are available. Without the $$ incentive
most commercial products will never make it to Linux.
And then there is always the argument that programmers time could be
better spent creating new products, not reinventing old ones.
--
Robert Payne
Chris Waters (des...@netcom.com) wrote:
: In article <54p15m$q...@dailyplanet.wam.umd.edu>,
: I'm not too big on the free Motif clone idea. Motif already exists
: and you can buy it for a reasonable price. Any clone will have
: incompatibilities and features (read bugs) different from Motif and
: that detracts from it's attractiveness. I believe it is in the
: best interest of the Linux community to support vendors who make
: commercial products available in a Linux release.
That's one way of looking at things. On the other hand, I feel that its
in the best interests of the Linux community to remember the spirit of
the GNU public license on which the whole house was built. What's so great
about yet another non-redistributable proprietary app?
That means
: buying products such as Motif, Netscape and the many other fine
: products out there already. It is only through the availability of
: commercial products that Linux will really gain acceptance on a
: broader scale (read kicking MS butt).
I think that is a flawed attitude for Linux users to adopt. Linux
does not depend on proprietary software vendors, and that is one of
its most vital strengths. You seem to want to turn Linux into just
another market for non-free software (and by non-free I mean it in the
sense of source code non-availibility and non-redistributability).
If your vision came true, the only difference there would be between
Linux and MS is the kernel.
I don't believe the primary goal of people who contribute to linux
and free software products is "kicking MS butt". Their goal is to
write good code and gain the satisfaction of writing good code. Hard
for those indoctrinated into the non-free mindset to believe, but true.
We must have standarization to
: ease the porting process of these products to Linux which increases
: the attractiveness of Linux to commercial developers. The other
: gotcha is, of course, that the Linux market must exist. People must
: purchase the products that are available. Without the $$ incentive
: most commercial products will never make it to Linux.
Standardization is definitely a good thing. However, your assertion that
"the Linux market must exist" is the opinion of one group of Linux
users, usually not the view of those who contribute anything. Linux
has value whether or not a "market" exists, and there are many who
could care less whether or not proprietary commercial applications are
ported to Linux. If they are, great--but creating a market for others
based on the work of free software producers is not a priority.
: And then there is always the argument that programmers time could be
: better spent creating new products, not reinventing old ones.
: --
: Robert Payne
Is mise,
Ryan Rafferty
--
>Im Artikel <32651589...@devconsult.de> schrieb
>Ingo Luetkebohle <i...@devconsult.de>:
>
>> Did you ever see a company whose primary target is Linux?
>
>Caldera?
RedHat?
Clayton L. Hines
UNIX Software Specialist email Hin...@MUOhio.edu
Miami University voice 513.529.7600
Oxford, Ohio, USA fax 513.529.1496
rpa...@rainbow.rmii.com (Robert Payne) writes:
>
>
> I'm not too big on the free Motif clone idea. Motif already exists
> and you can buy it for a reasonable price. Any clone will have
> incompatibilities and features (read bugs) different from Motif and
> that detracts from it's attractiveness. I believe it is in the
> best interest of the Linux community to support vendors who make
> commercial products available in a Linux release. That means
> buying products such as Motif, Netscape and the many other fine
> products out there already. It is only through the availability of
> commercial products that Linux will really gain acceptance on a
> broader scale (read kicking MS butt). We must have standarization to
> ease the porting process of these products to Linux which increases
> the attractiveness of Linux to commercial developers. The other
> gotcha is, of course, that the Linux market must exist. People must
> purchase the products that are available. Without the $$ incentive
> most commercial products will never make it to Linux.
>
The third item is that you have to have the $$ to buy the commercial
products. Those that have the $$ do buy the commercial products (I do
as much as possible to keep the market alive). There is probably a
larger majority that currently cant. To them a free Motif is a boon so
that they can code up a product for whatever reasons they want (sell
so they can have $$ to buy things, give away, etc). There is a also a
religous argument... how far would have Linux development gotten if
the compiler,libraries, etc had cost the hundreds of developers money
in the first place.
> And then there is always the argument that programmers time could be
> better spent creating new products, not reinventing old ones.
Ahh but if that were the case Linux would never have been born in the
first place. I mean we always had SCO :). Say the LessTiff people come
out with a motif that uses less memory for free (maybe
possible)... then the coders of Motif will have to do so also. If
there is no competition there is rarely any improvement.
--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stephen John Smoogen "The Basement is where all the neat stuff is"
Spyglass Incorporated (217) 373-3996
Systems Administrator ssmo...@spyglass.com
> Commercial systems have (mostly) adopted three things: X, Motif, and
> CDE. The first of those is freely available, and Linux has it. The
> last is also freely available, at least according to the info I got at
> Uniforum.
Could you please post a reference to the free CDE?
Actually, I think that the existance of a free Motif will help
Linux commercial products and desktop unix in general. One of
the real problems with Motif has been its commercial nature (besides
being slow, hard to program, and weird and buggy). It has meant
that free software authors have been slow to write for it, as not
everyone has it or can get it. Which means that interfaces and look/feel
has varied greatly in free X software.
Also, since Motif is commercial and not everyone has it, vendors that
sell software for Linux that uses Motif, statically link it- hurting
the performance of the apps (how many copies of static motif lib do
you want on your system memory at a time) and the sales of their products.
A free Motif- binary compatible with OSF/Motif (through the miracle
of modern shared libs) would address these problems.
cheers,
jem.
--
j...@cnidr.org\/Center for Networked Information and Discovery
Co-author of The Web Server Book, available July, '95 from Ventana Press
<URL:http://www.vmedia.com/cat/press/store/wsb>
> [...] Finishing LessTif and GNUstep may not
> sound as sexy, but I think it would be a whole lot more useful.
I'd like to second this without any change. In my opinion sticking to
already existing standards is the only way to let Linux get reputation not
only as server but also as desktop OS.
Martin.
--
EMail: I prefer correspondence to: Martin...@onyx.dirnet.com
If necessary, business mail can be sent to: Martin...@uni-duisburg.de
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unix _IS_ user friendly - it's just selective about who its friends are !
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Linux is what it is today because it is a BETTER UNIX than UNIX!
It was built on the GNU principle of creating software that is
FREE, compatable with, and BETTER than the original. Unix users from
students to large software houses use GNU utilities on all kinds of
hardware, not because their vendor supplied software is bad (though some
of it is) but because GNU is better.
Linux is now leading many commercial Unices in several areas. It needs
to first catch up, then lead on the desktop. First make Lesstif & CDE
work on Linux (and other Unices) then make them better. Then the
desktop standard WILL be free and no single company or consortium will
be able to control it.
The original intent with CDE was the same as going toward SVR5, bring
all the chaos in UNIX to a manageble middle ground. There is still room
for creativity and not everyone will use CDE but UNIX (and Linux) will
be stronger for having it.
Linux MUST have Lesstif and a free CDE. They must also work
interchangably with other systems' implementations. Can you imagine
Linux without X? Networking? Anything else that is compatable with
other Unices? Just because this software did not start out free does
not mean that we cannot make it free, and make it better.
I want to have the option not to buy a commercial product that I don't feel
I need. If I don't want Netscape, I can choose a free browser. If I don't want
a spreadsheet, I don't have to buy it. If I do want wordperfect, I can buy it.
I can choose what I need, and ignore the rest.
The problem with the linux community settling on a commercial product as
a standard GUI toolkit is that it is no longer optional. Anyone who wants to do
anything remotely GUI-ish would have to pay for it. You might as well pay for
the operating system, while you're at it! How is that any better than being just
another Microserf?
> It is only through the availability of
>commercial products that Linux will really gain acceptance on a
>broader scale (read kicking MS butt).
It is only by gaining acceptance at a broader scale that commercial
products will become available. Catch-22, anyone?
Anyway, we've gotten as far as we are today without much help from
anyone. I think if we are ever to kick MS butt, we will do it in that
uniquely UNIX-ish way... through sheer technological superiority,
and nerdish enthusiasm!
> We must have standarization to
>ease the porting process of these products to Linux which increases
>the attractiveness of Linux to commercial developers.
If we must standardize on one toolkit, I say we pick something free, like Qt.
>The other
1>gotcha is, of course, that the Linux market must exist. People must
>purchase the products that are available. Without the $$ incentive
>most commercial products will never make it to Linux.
If we work on improving Java support, we will be able to run all the fancy new
programs being written for Java. Why slave away at gaining our own market
acceptance, when we can borrow somebody elses? ;-) And once it becomes
clear that Linux makes a good Java platform, it might occur to some people
that it could be good for other things too...
-Eugene
> The problem with the linux community settling on a commercial product as
> a standard GUI toolkit is that it is no longer optional. Anyone who wants to do
> anything remotely GUI-ish would have to pay for it. You might as well pay for
> the operating system, while you're at it! How is that any better than being just
> another Microserf?
Yes, you have to pay for it, you paid for the computer didn't you? What I
mean is, it's great that LiNUX is free, but some things aren't, and if you
want to have a GUI that's fairly standard (Motif), along with the CDE (which
is THE coolest thing I've ever seen for LiNUX), you have to pay for it.
It sucks, but I spent the money, now I've forgotten about the money, but
I've still got this great product, and will have for some years now. Oh,
and I think if you mess around with CDE + Motif you'd see that it's *worlds*
ahead of Microsoft.
>> It is only through the availability of
>>commercial products that Linux will really gain acceptance on a
>>broader scale (read kicking MS butt).
Well which direction are you going here? You're right, LiNUX does need
commercial acceptance, and that means commercial companies have to feel
relatively sure that there will be acceptance for their product on a
given platform before they decide to support that platform. If, however,
25% of LiNUX users use Motif, 25% Athena 25% Qt (All these #'s are
hypothetical and probably grossly wrong, but point remains), and the
other 25% use some sick mixture of the above, do you *really* think
alot of companies are going to feel good about investing time and money
into a LiNUX port, only to hear everyone cry about needing the Motif
libraries? So they make a static distribution, and everyone cries that
it's a resource hog and kills their performance? Come on.
> It is only by gaining acceptance at a broader scale that commercial
> products will become available. Catch-22, anyone?
Yes that's certainly true.
> Anyway, we've gotten as far as we are today without much help from
> anyone. I think if we are ever to kick MS butt, we will do it in that
> uniquely UNIX-ish way... through sheer technological superiority,
> and nerdish enthusiasm!
That's a good thing, *and* a bad thing. How many other OS's have a
zillion different widget sets, many in prevalent use? Sure some of
them are ported to like HPUX, AIX, etc, but Motif remains the standard
of choice on those platforms, _not_ the case with LiNUX.
>> We must have standarization to
>>ease the porting process of these products to Linux which increases
>>the attractiveness of Linux to commercial developers.
Another great point, solution -> Motif, and especially CDE.
> If we must standardize on one toolkit, I say we pick something free, like Qt.
I disagree. If you're going to standardize, REALLY standardize, which means,
use the standards others are using. Don't come up with some proprietary
solution, then call it a standard. Don't reinvent the wheel for everything
which is not free. This is not a flame, please think about these things,
as many of them have direct relevance to the future of LiNUX.
-Brian
I did not say, that the programs should look all different! Of course
they sould look all the the same, but everyone should be able to define
the look they look all the same!
For example it should be part of the GUI do move a Iconbar round the
desk. And it should be *not* part of the program!
-- bis später...
- Sascha ---<~>=( http://www.ping.de/sites/aibon/ )=<~>---
() Free speech online
/\ http://www.eff.org/BlueRibbon/bluehtml.html
> In my opinion this would turn back the wheel. Why do you need to
> change the appearance of a program? The user interface is designed to
> reflect the internal state of the program. If the user interface is
> designed adequate, there's no need to add more an more stuff or to
What is adequate??? Do you define it???
> change the layout of it's widgets. You can't improve the functionality
> of such a program by doing things like that.
I can give the program a more practical touch. There are allways
different users and so there must be also different Outfits. Some want,
everything in the menu and others want everything in Short-Icons. Some
want do every step after each other, others want all gui-elements in one
window. How will be right????
> There were times, when nearly every little software-firm had their own
> view of GUIs. Some thought the style of a button would be great for
> headlines. Others implemented text-fields as labels. Diversity is not
> always the best. That's the good thing with Windows or MACs GUI: If
> you are familiar to the outfit of one program, it's easy to use all
> others.
It is your choice, weather you use these features or not. You don't need
to use them, but I want that functionality!
> So, a generalized GUI makes life a lot easier and let's you focus on
> the really important part of using a program: Make the program what
> you want, not make it look like you want.
And if a GUI combines my wishes, we could both be happy. You have your
Mac-GUI and I have my special-Sasche-GUI. That would be a great GUI,
that allows such flexible handling!
> If I had to vote what development tools to use for KDE, it most
> certainly would be TCL/TK (used in an intelligent way...).
TCL/Tk is bullshit! A new replacement is under construction: GUILE!
Tk will get a much more common interface to use it from GUILE, Perl,
Python etc.
But Tk is still old and boring stuff. It is much to unflexible!
Hmm ... I'm starting to agree with this guy (but then again, that
might have something to do with me seriously thinking about shelling out
the $$$ for Motif :-) :-)).
Perhaps we should concentrate on helping the Hungry Programmers
finish LessTif! They haven't even gotten to Motif 1.2 compatibility yet
(last I checked anyway). With everyone's help, maybe they'll have Motif
2.0 compatibility by the end of the year!
I've just took a look at the Xaw-XPM web site, and this has gotta
be the best Xaw enhancement yet!
Why don't we use this!? It's free, fast, and easy to use. Plus
with all the enhancements Ben Buxton has made (and still making), like
*animated pixmaps for widgets*, and attached sound effects to widget
events ... Xaw-XPM is certainly a serious contender for the standard KDE
widget set.
The animated pixmaps is one thing I really like. With this
feature, we can easily make a desktop similar to that of Win '95 (with all
those pretty animated icons). Of course, we would distribute a standard
set of pixmaps, sounds, and configuration with the KDE package ... but the
freedom to completly change things around would still be there.
Thoughts on this?
: Perhaps we should concentrate on helping the Hungry Programmers
: finish LessTif! They haven't even gotten to Motif 1.2 compatibility yet
: (last I checked anyway). With everyone's help, maybe they'll have Motif
: 2.0 compatibility by the end of the year!
The LessTif solution is certainly a better choice than standardizing on
something like Qt. This is not to be taken as a flame of Qt or other
nifty toolkits and stuff. But if we are going to have much commercial
software make it to Linux that is already available on the other UNIX
platforms, we must stay with a standard that the rest of the world is
using. The vendors of the various UNIX software packages aren't going
to waste their time trying to port something they already have running
on all the other Unices under X11/Motif to some oddball platform running
XYZ widgets. Hell, we might as well scrap POSIX compliance and come up
with our own new and improved API. NOT! Like it or not, the standard in
the X world today is Motif. There are those in the crowd who will say
that they don't need no stinkin' commercial software. I disagree.
Unless we get many of the same tools to aid developers that are available
to the rest of world, we will fall (stay?) behind. Nice CASE tools,
whiz-bang GUI generators, commercial quality SQL databases and so on,
are not going to ever be available to us if we diverge from the standards.
Even accepting LessTif as the standard could jeopardize getting many
tools. Motif has enough bugs of it's own, LessTif is sure to have bugs
unique to itself and be lacking in many of Motif's quirks. Settling on
LessTif as the standard will discourage porting of apps to Linux because
of increased porting time and risk. People who don't wish to shell out
the bucks for Motif can use still use LessTif but with the increased
risk of problems. Linux has come a long way but still has a ways to
go, let's not hamstring it.
IMHO,
--
Robert Payne
One of the points originally made in the KDE debate was that we should
get away from the cumbersome old X stuff like the Athena Widget (really
everything above Xlib). Programs made with Xt and Xaw tend to be very
large memory consumers and ugly. Making them look better is not the
only concern.
Pixmaps may be faster for some things, but using them extensively can put
a heavy load on the system and thus require people to have high end Pxxx's
and lots of RAM just to get going, when otherwise a decently equipped 486
box would be fine...
--
Pat Dowler
UVic Astronomy
dow...@uvastro.phys.uvic.ca
#include <standard_disclaimer.h>
> But Tk is still old and boring stuff. It is much to unflexible!
Compared to what?
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
What is the difference between Jurassic Park and Microsoft? One is a high-tech
theme park dominated by dinosaurs, and the other is a Steven Spielberg movie.
--- Mike Hammond
I'm afraid I will disappoint you but GUILE is every bit as much bullshit
as TCL/Tk. Both are bloated top-heavy solutions to a problem that would
benefit from having less layers between the user interface and working
code.
I think the KDE people are trying to do something very different, in
particular they are trying to cut through the profusion of different
toolkits so that every app on the desktop shares the same single shared
library for the toolkit. Small, fast and consistent.
--
Michael Dillon - ISP & Internet Consulting
Memra Software Inc. - Fax: +1-604-546-3049
http://www.memra.com - E-mail: mic...@memra.com
Err bullshit... ?
You are not supposed to use TCL as the main programming
language. You write your programs in C (the TCL-library helps
you a lot with that).
Then you use TCL/TK as highlevel "glue" to define the userinterface
and the overall structure of your application.
Again: Don't use TCL to write your whole application, 'cause (as
you pointed out) there are tools better suited for that purpose.
(C, perl, python, and what not.)
>
> But Tk is still old and boring stuff. It is much to unflexible!
Could you elaborate on this? What is "boring"? What do you mean with
"unflexible"?
I don't want to start another widget flame war! I just think that
TCL/TK is not treated fair, because some people misunderstood the
concept and wrote gigantic application using only TCL, which are of
course slow.
What is apealing about TCL is it's simplicity and it's extensibility,
and yet it's power!
>
> -- bis später...
> - Sascha ---<~>=( http://www.ping.de/sites/aibon/ )=<~>---
>
> () Free speech online
> /\ http://www.eff.org/BlueRibbon/bluehtml.html
Auch bis spaeter,
Lars
The <major free tool here, say gcc> solution is certainly a better choice
than standardizing on something like <some other related tool>. This is
not to be taken as a flame of <some other related tool> or other nifty
toolkits and stuff. But if we are going to have much commercial software
make it to Linux that is already available on the other UNIX platforms, we
must stay with a standard that the rest of the world is using. The
vendors of the various UNIX software packages aren't going to waste their
time trying to port something they already have running on all the other
Unices [...] to some oddball platform running gcc. Hell, we might as well
scrap POSIX compliance and come up with our own new and improved API.
NOT! Like it or not, the standard in the X world today is <some commecial
cc compiler>. There are those in the crowd who will say that they don't
need no stinkin' commercial software. I disagree. Unless we get many of
the same tools to aid developers that are available to the rest of world,
we will fall (stay?) behind. Nice CASE tools, whiz-bang GUI generators,
commercial quality SQL databases and so on, are not going to ever be
available to us if we diverge from the standards. Even accepting gcc as
the standard could jeopardize getting many tools. Cc has enough bugs of
it's own, gcc is sure to have bugs (and features) unique to itself and be
lacking in many of cc's quirks. Settling on gcc as the standard will
discourage porting of apps to Linux because of increased porting time and
risk. People who don't wish to shell out the bucks for cc can use still
use gcc but with the increased risk of problems. Linux has come a long
way but still has a ways to go, let's not hamstring it.
--
--
William Burrow -- Fredericton Area Network, New Brunswick, Canada
Copyright 1996 William Burrow, portions Copyright 1996 Robert Payne
This line left intentionally blank.
>The <major free tool here, say gcc> solution is certainly a better choice
>than standardizing on something like <some other related tool>.
[more text elided]
This was a cute bit of editing, but it completely misses the point. Gcc
is a success because it follows existing standards (both the older K&R C
"-traditional" still used with some Unices and ANSI/ISO C). The idea of
making something new *AND INCOMPATIBLE* is not analogous. Gcc is better
than most Unix compilers, and code targeted at gcc is not necessarily
compatible with other compilers, but code targeted at those other
compilers is almost always compatible with gcc.
And *THIS* is the reason we should be supporting projects like LessTif
and GNUStep, and helping turn them into something that is compatible
with, but better than, the existing standards. And *NOT* haring off
after vaguely defined "I don't know what it is, but it'll be cool,
'cause it's got a cool name" type projects that are incompatible with
existing standards.
For a slightly closer analogy in compiler terms to the original post,
try:
"The Objective C solution is certainly a better choice than standardizing
on something like C."
Except that Objective C already exists, while the abysmally named "Kool
Desktop Environment" doesn't. So, for Objective C, substitute, "K, the
Kool language, which we'll design RSN, and it'll be kool, man."
Like it or not, we're better of building our C compiler first (LessTif),
then adding C++ (CDE), then maybe adding Objective C (OpenStep/GNUStep?),
and then we can look into creating new languages/GUIs. Maybe you don't
think so, maybe you think C and all it's derivatives suck. That may be
fine for you, but in the real world, C is what is used to get the job
done, and so is Motif.
My analogies in this post are nowhere near perfect, and I'll be the
first to admit it, but I think the main point is clear, that following
existing standards is what has gotten the FSF and Linux both to where
they are, and that abandoning that direction at this point would be a
big mistake.
As for the fellow who thinks that Linux has gotten big and powerful
enough to impose its own standards on the world (I won't say marketplace
because that would be ambiguous in this context)--all I can say is, can
I have some of what you're smoking? Yes, Linux has made major progress
from the days where it was an obscure hacker-only system. But it bears
no obvious resemblance to an 800-pound gorilla. Hell, I'm still scared
to put Linux on my resume, and I'm glad that I have SCO experience, so I
can legitimately claim x86 *NIX experience without outright lying. When
the day comes that Linux gets a better response from the corporate
trolls than SCO or Sun, *that's* the day we can start thinking about
imposing our own standards on developers! And that day is not now.
p.s. anyone out there hiring? :-)
> I'm afraid I will disappoint you but GUILE is every bit as much bullshit
> as TCL/Tk. Both are bloated top-heavy solutions to a problem that would
> benefit from having less layers between the user interface and working
> code.
Come again? Tk is one *less* layer than, e.g., OSF/Motif -- it operates
at the same level as Xt, which OSF/Motif sits on top of. On my system,
the Tk library is less than one-third of the size of the Xt and Motif
libraries combined. There are a couple of faults one could find with Tk,
but bloat and top-heaviness aren't among them.
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
Hundreds of people are telling me that an object-oriented language must be
used to get clean software. I no longer believe any such claims. The issue is
design, not programming language. -- D.L.Parnas, *Why Software Jewels Are Rare*
: > I'm afraid I will disappoint you but GUILE is every bit as much bullshit
: > as TCL/Tk. Both are bloated top-heavy solutions to a problem that would
: > benefit from having less layers between the user interface and working
: > code.
: Come again? Tk is one *less* layer than, e.g., OSF/Motif -- it operates
: at the same level as Xt, which OSF/Motif sits on top of. On my system,
: the Tk library is less than one-third of the size of the Xt and Motif
: libraries combined. There are a couple of faults one could find with Tk,
: but bloat and top-heaviness aren't among them.
Are you sure that Motif sits on top of Xt? That's not the way I remember
it, but I don't have a cite handy...
--
Grant Edwards | Microsoft isn't the | Yow! HELLO KITTY gang
Rosemount Inc. | answer. Microsoft | terrorizes town, family
| is the question, and | STICKERED to death!
gra...@rosemount.com | the answer is no. |
: >The <major free tool here, say gcc> solution is certainly a better choice
: >than standardizing on something like <some other related tool>.
: [more text elided]
: This was a cute bit of editing, but it completely misses the point. Gcc
: is a success because it follows existing standards (both the older K&R C
: "-traditional" still used with some Unices and ANSI/ISO C). The idea of
: making something new *AND INCOMPATIBLE* is not analogous. Gcc is better
One could substitute Perl for gcc, if necessary for one's sensibilities;
I did state "major free tool", not intending to restrict it to only gcc.
The point is that the argument presented substantively showed that the
author has a silver tongue. :) The same argument could be applied to
either side of the issue.
There are arguments to be made for slavish standardization as for
innovative creativity. Some solid points would be more interesting than
prosaic ranting.
: My analogies in this post are nowhere near perfect, and I'll be the
: first to admit it, but I think the main point is clear, that following
: existing standards is what has gotten the FSF and Linux both to where
: they are, and that abandoning that direction at this point would be a
: big mistake.
Analogies are rarely perfect, nor are they intended to be.
Perhaps there is space for standards following software AND the ground
breaking or just plain different stuff. The GUI arena is by no means
fully understood and exploited, it is here that some leeway should be
granted.
: As for the fellow who thinks that Linux has gotten big and powerful
: enough to impose its own standards on the world (I won't say marketplace
: because that would be ambiguous in this context)--all I can say is, can
Just to be clear, I never asserted this.
: p.s. anyone out there hiring? :-)
Didja see RedHat's ad?
--
--
William Burrow -- Fredericton Area Network, New Brunswick, Canada
Copyright 1996 William Burrow
> Are you sure that Motif sits on top of Xt? That's not the way I remember
> it, but I don't have a cite handy...
Look at the Makefile for any application using the OSF/Motif software.
You will find that they all need to be linked against libXt.
Anselm
--
Anselm Lingnau ......................... lin...@tm.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
Since gcc has a -Wall option, when is perl going to get a -Stallman option?
--- David J. MacKenzie
: : Come again? Tk is one *less* layer than, e.g., OSF/Motif -- it operates
: : at the same level as Xt, which OSF/Motif sits on top of. On my system,
: : the Tk library is less than one-third of the size of the Xt and Motif
: : libraries combined. There are a couple of faults one could find with Tk,
: : but bloat and top-heaviness aren't among them.
: Are you sure that Motif sits on top of Xt? That's not the way I remember
: it, but I don't have a cite handy...
I rembered wrong. Motif is based on Xt. It was Sun's OpenLook toolkit that
wasn't. (Though AT&T's OpenLook toolkit was based on a superset of Xt.)
--
Grant Edwards | Microsoft isn't the | Yow! I HAVE to buy a new
Rosemount Inc. | answer. Microsoft | ``DODGE MISER'' and two dozen
| is the question, and | JORDACHE JEANS because my
gra...@rosemount.com | the answer is no. | viewscreen is
| ``USER-FRIENDLY''!!
Yes, Motif sits on top of Xt. Motif adds numerous widget and gadget
classes that dervie from the base Xt classes.
--linas