atlantafx
Recaf
atlantafx | Recaf | |
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15 | 24 | |
679 | 5,620 | |
- | - | |
7.5 | 4.1 | |
5 months ago | 11 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
atlantafx
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AtlantaFX 2.0 released
The full changelog is here: https://github.com/mkpaz/atlantafx/releases/tag/v2.0.0
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Any library you would like to recommend to others as it helps you a lot? For me, mapstruct is one of them. Hopefully I would hear some other nice libraries I never try.
AtlantaFX & CSSFX for styling in JavaFX
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Win32 App Isolation
JVM UI isn't so bad. I've written some pretty modern looking UI with it. The sophisticated controls are all there.
Modern JavaFX theme: https://github.com/mkpaz/atlantafx
Modern Swing theme: https://github.com/JFormDesigner/FlatLaf
And these days Compose Multiplatform: https://www.jetbrains.com/lp/compose-multiplatform/
I tend to use Kotlin rather than Java but of course Java is perfectly fine too. You can also use Clojure.
If you use any of those frameworks you can distribute to Win/Mac/Linux in one command with Conveyor. It's free for open source apps and can do self-signing for Windows if you don't want to pay for the certificates or the Store (but the Store is super cheap these days, $19 one off payment for an individual). Also supports Electron and Flutter if you want to use those.
From those frameworks you can then access whatever parts of the Windows API you want. Flutter even has WinRT bindings these days! So it's not quite so bad.
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Podman Desktop 1.0
Objectively by what measure?
Bear in mind that there are alternatives: JavaFX and Compose for Desktop are the ones I know best. They can be used from high level and popular languages. JavaFX is particularly good for desktop apps and can be compiled down to purely native code that starts as fast as an app written in C++ (likewise for Compose but the experiments with that are newer).
There are some downsides: fewer people know them than with HTML. There are a few tweaks like window styles on macOS it could use to be more modern. On the other hand, it's easy to learn and you benefit from a proper reactively bindable widget library, like table and tree views if you need those. For developer tools such widgets can be useful.
There's a modern theme for JavaFX here:
https://github.com/mkpaz/atlantafx
CfD uses Material Design of course, but you can customize it.
Having written desktop apps of varying complexity in all these frameworks, I can't say Electron is clearly superior. It is in some cases (e.g. if I was wanting to write a video conferencing app then it makes sense to re-use Google's investment into Hangouts/Meet for that), but it's also worse in some cases. For instance the multi-process model constantly gets in the way, but you can't disable it as otherwise XSS turns into RCE.
- FlatLaf 3.1 (and 3.0) - Swing Look and Feel
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A new connection manager and remote file explorer created with Java(FX) - X-Pipe Status Update
The JavaFX styling was completely switched to AtlantaFX in order to achieve the best possible look. This library is honestly the best that you can get if you want your application to have a good and uniform look + dark mode support that doesn't look like we are in the year 2010:
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New AtlantaFX themes
I was really inspired of Dracula color palette, so I decided to spend some time to create a couple of new themes for AtlantaFX. They still need some polishing, but now the project supports 7 themes in total. Here's some preview of Dracula theme and the new classic tab style.
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Migrating a JavaFX app to AtlantaFX themes
The video shows different screens of a JavaFX app before and after migrating from a custom styling (left) to AtlantaFX themes (right). In the first step we were primarily focused on colors/borders and dark mode, so many of the controls are still based on JFoenix (obsolete) and will be migrated in the next step.
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Is JavaFX a viable solution for this project?
That said if you like Java and feel productive you absolutely can use it to build great desktop apps. Check out https://github.com/mkpaz/atlantafx for great modern look and feel. Lots of other great resources.
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Dark mode for JavaFX/Swing is out! please leave a star if you like it!
Technically, it's not a theme, because it works on top of Modena, you only recolored some controls. Check AtlantaFX, it supports all JavaFX controls. You can even compile your own theme from it.
Recaf
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what is the easiest way to decompile, edit and recompile a mod?
IF you've got the legal situation all sorted out, and know that you need to change a Java class file, and know how to program in Java, I'd suggest Recaf. With it, you can import a jar file, decompile, edit and recompile any source files in it, and export the whole thing again.
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Is there any tool for Java reverse engineering that doesn't totally suck?
No one seems to mention Recaf wich is the best option IMO. You can choose between different decompilers (Fernflower, CFR, Jadx, Procyon and others) has bytecode editing capabilities (you don't have to fully decompile, you can edit the bytecode directly), built in peephole optimizations for flow and number obfuscations, various search options for methods, members, strings, and method virtualization via SSVM
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What happened to JFX-Central?
Uhhh, no? For something like JavaFX, which I've complained about its bad native handling before, you can still make a multi-platform jar with a little bit of effort. For instance my project Recaf is distributed as a single JAR file. Just install JDK 11+ and you're good to go.
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Visual diff text comparator GUI component
I did something like this, but its not its own control/library: https://github.com/Col-E/Recaf/blob/dev3/recaf-ui/src/main/java/me/coley/recaf/ui/pane/DiffViewPane.java
- How to decompile jars (how not to get ratted v2)
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The Code the FBI Used to Wiretap the World
The decompiler they used to view that code is not very good, that output is garbled.
If you're going to take apart JVM bytecode, you're better off using Recafe or Quiltflower.
https://github.com/Col-E/Recaf
https://github.com/QuiltMC/quiltflower
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Rat finding tools
I've recently been searching for tools that can help me find rats within jar files. So far I've found jd-gui and Recaf, do you all have any suggestions for other tools?
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Simple loading Pop up - how to add?
Example: DecompilePane.java
- is diablo crack safe or nah
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Java versus Kotlin - personal experiences
#1: Are you interested in learning about low latency zero allocation programming? #2: Recaf: Java bytecode reversing tool I've been working on for the past 3.5 years | 37 comments #3: My experimental IDE plugin for displaying all project files in a single view, with zoom/pan and code editing. More info in comments. | 57 comments
What are some alternatives?
instancio - A library that creates fully populated objects for your unit tests.
jpexs-decompiler - JPEXS Free Flash Decompiler
FlatLaf - FlatLaf - Swing Look and Feel (with Darcula/IntelliJ themes support)
deobfuscator - The real deal
opal - Plays relaxing music in the background
rat-checker - this project is a checker for virus's and token loggers in java apps
JavaFX-Dark-Theme - A complete CSS stylesheet to set a dark theme in your JavaFX UI.
threadtear - Multifunctional java deobfuscation tool suite
flexmark-java - CommonMark/Markdown Java parser with source level AST. CommonMark 0.28, emulation of: pegdown, kramdown, markdown.pl, MultiMarkdown. With HTML to MD, MD to PDF, MD to DOCX conversion modules.
Ghidra-Cpp-Class-Analyzer - Ghidra C++ Class and Run Time Type Information Analyzer
litefs - FUSE-based file system for replicating SQLite databases across a cluster of machines
MaterialFX - A library of material components for JavaFX