tornadofx
teavm
tornadofx | teavm | |
---|---|---|
9 | 30 | |
3,669 | 2,479 | |
- | - | |
1.1 | 9.5 | |
about 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
Kotlin | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
tornadofx
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Why was TornadoFX abandoned?
And yet, the Kotlin specific bindings for it have seemingly been abandoned, and have not received any updates in years: https://github.com/edvin/tornadofx
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What library/framework would you recommend for creating a GUI desktop application?
Hi, at some point in the past I used mvvmFX and it was pretty nice to work with, but sadly it looks abandoned. So does drombler-fx which I remember looking into around that time. There was also tornado-fx (don't mind doing GUI code in Kotlin) but that's unmaintained now too. All that I could find today is Griffon, although that's clearly slowing down as well.
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What are good examples of well written code in Kotlin (e.g HTTP4K)
TornadoFx (JavaFX framework for Kotlin)
- Ask HN: Does Java need a modern Java UI toolkit for desktop/web?
- TornadoFX
- what is the best way of implementing a GUI nowadays?
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Is TornadoFx should be used in production ?
P.S. Yes, last official release is Java 8. But we all were using the last snapshot of https://github.com/edvin/tornadofx/tree/jdk10 published to Sonatype in the last years. Or tornadofx2 linked above.
- Kotlin Desktop - Which GUI library
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Design Patterns for multi-screen JavaFX applications
If you are willing to consider Kotlin targeting JVM instead of pure Java, I would definitely recommend you to take a look at tornadofx. I have experience with both frameworks (mvvmfx and tornadofx), and I prefer the latter.
teavm
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Spin 2.0 – open-source tool for building and running WASM apps
Joel from our team worked on the initial prototype for WASI support in TeaVM (https://github.com/konsoletyper/teavm/pull/610), and we temporarily forked before the WASI support made it to the official repo.
Good reminder to deprecate that now!
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Bring garbage collected programming languages efficiently to WebAssembly
A number of concerns with the viability of the current WASM GC are covered here (Google translation to English):
https://habr-com.translate.goog/ru/articles/757182/?_x_tr_sl...
and the original article:
https://habr.com/ru/articles/757182/
This is from the author of TeaVM, who has 10 years of experience getting Java and JVM code to run efficiently in the browser. https://teavm.org/
TeaVM's existing transpilation of Java to JavaScript performs well (using the browsers JS GC). It will be interesting to see if WASM GC matures to the point where it is even faster.
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Play Runescape Classic Again
Uses this apparently: https://github.com/konsoletyper/teavm
- ASP.NET Core Dev Team Launches 'Blazor United' Push for .NET 8
- Pure Java Typesetting System
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Embed your Doom in Java with GraalVM Wasm.
How does this compare to say the TeaVM (https://github.com/konsoletyper/teavm) which I know only has "experimental" WASM support at the moment?
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Regex101.com needs help getting a small Rust WASM binary
For Java, no WASM file is requested. Maybe the Java code was transpiled to JavaScript, perhaps using TeaVM.
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Oracle Contributing GraalVM Community Edition Java Code to OpenJDK
>> It's not like you can take a random JAR and convert it to WASM.
Maybe you can:
TeaVM is an ahead-of-time compiler for Java bytecode that emits JavaScript and WebAssembly that runs in a browser. Its close relative is the well-known GWT. The main difference is that TeaVM does not require source code, only compiled class files. Moreover, the source code is not required to be Java, so TeaVM successfully compiles Kotlin and Scala.
https://teavm.org/
I have never had an opportunity to try out TeaVM, but it seems promising.
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Using Java for the front-end of a web app in 2022
For a fast, lightweight, Java-based front-end, try TeaVM and its Flavour toolkit:
https://teavm.org/
It is easy to get started by using the maven archtetype, there's an tutorial in Java Magazine here:
https://blogs.oracle.com/javamagazine/post/java-in-the-brows...
With TeamVM and Flavour you get a full front-end SPA framework that lets you code business logic in Java, and pair that with HTML and CSS to make components.
To see what it can do, check out Wordii, a fast-paced 5-letter word game:
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TSMC to Begin 3nm Chip Production Next Month, Apple gets first dib
> Someone will make the JRE run on WASM
https://teavm.org/
Minecraft contains some native dependencies, though; you'll need something like https://copy.sh/v86/ or https://bellard.org/jslinux/ with the right operating system image to run it in browser.
What are some alternatives?
compose-multiplatform - Compose Multiplatform, a modern UI framework for Kotlin that makes building performant and beautiful user interfaces easy and enjoyable.
Graal - GraalVM compiles Java applications into native executables that start instantly, scale fast, and use fewer compute resources 🚀
tornadofx2 - TornadoFX 2.0
HumbleUI - Clojure Desktop UI framework
kotlin-native-gtk - GTK+ bindings for Kotlin Native
teavm-flavour - Framework for writing client-side applications using TeaVM
FlatLaf - FlatLaf - Swing Look and Feel (with Darcula/IntelliJ themes support)
spring-fu - Configuration DSLs for Spring Boot
mvvmFX - an Application Framework for implementing the MVVM Pattern with JavaFX
wasm3 - 🚀 A fast WebAssembly interpreter and the most universal WASM runtime
javafx-app-1 - JavaFX Application Demos in Kotlin
helidon - Java libraries for writing microservices