Visual Perl Tool for GTK/QT development? 10
Robin Smidsrød asks: I'm planning on making a full multimedia system with my Linux-box. In this process I need to make a GUI for selecting which files to insert into a playlist for my mp3-player. Since I've done a lot of coding in Perl, and both QT and GTK-bindings are available, I'd like to program my GUI in perl and GTK/QT. The program isn't really very advanced, but are there any tools available for (at least) setting up the GUI, or maybe a complete IDE? I've done several queries on Altavista, and I've searched Freshmeat too, but no luck. Can anybody help me?" Heck! Microsoft has Visual Basic, why can't we have "Visual Perl"?
A few things (Score:1)
(http://www.activestate.com), including a support
program, language ties to VisualBasic, and a few
other doodads.
There's a GUI perl debugger at
http://members.tripod.com/~CurtMcKelvey/perldbg
I thought there was a commercial IDE, but I lost
the URL to it..
Check out Glade (Score:2)
generation is implemented seperate from the GUI builder so new language bindings can be added easily. I've used it for small projects and it absolutely rocks. Check it out at
glade.pn.org [pn.org]
The other thing I've looked at is Kdevelop. It's very impressive, if a bit KDE/Qt centric. It's generic enough that you could do editing/compiling/CVS from it, and it's got real nice HTML documentation generation tools. It's at
www.kedevelop.org [kdevelop.org]. I think there's also a GUI designer for it. GIDE is for GTK/Gnome, it doesn't seem as mature as Kdevelop. It's at gide.pn.org [pn.org].
Enjoy
hmm.. (Score:1)
SpecTCL/SpecPerl (Score:1)
It only builds Tk applications though... in any case, Perl/Tk is *very* cool. GTK and Qt aren't the only choices.
Re:SpecTCL/SpecPerl (Score:1)
Ha, now we're getting to the point. (Score:1)
By far and by large, companies prefer to shell out cash, and massively, to Micros~1, rather than deploying linux. And price is the issue!
A $150 dollar is approximately the price for 1 Windooz license. For $150 you can waste 2 hours in development. There is no way that you will lose less than 2 hours per linux installed, using linux tools. You will lose a multiple of that.
There is simple not one single decent RAD tool for linux to crank out client/server business-database applications, that will enable the company to manage sales orders, invoices, bills of materials, time sheets, and so on.
Therefore, buggy as it is, Windooz is cheap and linux, free as it is, damn expensive.
*** OS without RAD tool? OS suuucks!!! ***