@bnolsen, for me whole QML concept seems like idea from Nokia (which used to own Qt at that time), mostly for use with their platforms (which they abandoned, after switching to Windows Phone).
QML is currently only useful for small applications, only since introduction of... (almost) real widgets. :-D
Hopefully nobody will ever force me to use it instead of QtWidgets.
JavaScript was available for much longer as scripting language, very useful thing (and integrates well with C++, even including exposing C++ objects to QtWebKit), if not abused.
And one of these additions in QtWidgets in 5.2 was QKeySequenceEdit.
I'm not sure if maintenance only is really true after departure of Nokia. Also there are widgets modules for QtMultimedia and QtWebkit (and there will be for QtWebEngine too).
QML is currently only useful for small applications, only since introduction of... (almost) real widgets. :-D
Hopefully nobody will ever force me to use it instead of QtWidgets.
JavaScript was available for much longer as scripting language, very useful thing (and integrates well with C++, even including exposing C++ objects to QtWebKit), if not abused.
And one of these additions in QtWidgets in 5.2 was QKeySequenceEdit.
I'm not sure if maintenance only is really true after departure of Nokia. Also there are widgets modules for QtMultimedia and QtWebkit (and there will be for QtWebEngine too).
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