workaround for generating gui tools

Ken Godee ken at perfect-image.com
Sun Apr 10 16:02:27 EDT 2005


Jeremy Bowers wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Apr 2005 13:57:26 +0200, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> 
> 
>>>Domain-specific abstractions do that *faster* than GUI designers, not
>>>slower. And better, too, since every iteration tends to be fully
>>>functional and not just a "let's see what this looks like" prototype.
>>
>>Can you show me some working, in-use example for that?  I _seriously_ doubt
>>that the process of rearranging and tuning the layout can be done faster in
>>the text-world than with a good designer like qt-designer. But I'm all ears
>>for better solutions.
> 
> 
> Regrettably, no. I have them but they are all unsharable, either because
> the real owner would consider them proprietary, or because they are an
> unreleased and at the moment unfinished product I can't give the code out
> for.
> 
> But I can help some.
> 

This guys gotta be a politician or english major or something! :)

155 lines, 1706 words, 9493 character reply, but his method is so simple
he still can't show us an example!

The original poster was just asking for an example of
how to sub class his code generated form into his program
for easy future updates, a "VERY STANDARD" way of doing it.

I tried at first to follow this "Great Way" of doing it,
but I guess I'm to simple minded, or just got to damed borded.

Hey, that's just me. I guess I'll just be stuck zapping out
forms with qt designer, the old fashion way.






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