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- What is the difference between Swing and AWT? - Stack Overflow
AWT is a Java interface to native system GUI code present in your OS It will not work the same on every system, although it tries Swing is a more-or-less pure-Java GUI It uses AWT to create an operating system window and then paints pictures of buttons, labels, text, checkboxes, etc , into that window and responds to all of your mouse-clicks, key entries, etc , deciding for itself what to
- Of Swing and AWT, why is one considered light-weight and the other . . .
14 AWT is said to be "Heavyweight" because basically each AWT component is a native platform component AWT is implemented on top of the platform's native GUI toolkit This also explains why AWT was pretty limited compared to Swing It uses the least common denominator as far as what is implemented
- Where can I find detailed information on how AWT interacts with the . . .
I've been searching for detailed information regarding the fundamentals of the AWT package Specifically how it interacts natively with the host OS to create Windows and their contents Can anyone
- The import java. awt cannot be resolved - Stack Overflow
Is the java awt included in JDK 10? Ye, the package does exist The Java10 API docs do confirm the same as well If yes where is and how can I make visible to Eclipse? In a modular code, all you need to do, is to resolve the java desktop module by declaring a dependency on it in your module-descriptor file (module-info java) i e requires java desktop;
- java - SWT and AWT, what is the difference? - Stack Overflow
AWT is the original cross-platform, native-peer based GUI widget set It drew a lot of complaints for not being perfectly consistent across platforms Sun built the Swing widget set to answer those concerns, building it with pure Java (no native peers), but people complained that it was slow and ugly IBM built SWT as a native-peer based competitor to Swing It succeeded because it looks good
- Java GUI frameworks. What to choose? Swing, SWT, AWT, SwingX, JGoodies . . .
AWT, Swing and SWT are UI toolkits but I would certainly not call them "frameworks" Frameworks are based upon a given UI toolkit and provide the glue to build your application First, you should choose the UI toolkit and then choose a framework that works on that toolkit FWIW, I would choose Swing with my own home-made Guts-GUI framework :-)
- The import java. awt cannot be resolved and - Stack Overflow
This occurs because project has dependency on library of J2SE 1 7 but it cannot find JRE at that location in your machine Project->Properties->Java Build Path Or Add a new JRE in eclipse using Window>Preferences>Java>Installed JRE and locate the path of the JRE folder in your machine and then replace the dependency of your project with the new JRE you installed in eclipse UPDATE UNBOUND JRE
- java - What is sun. awt. windows. WToolkit? - Stack Overflow
The names speak for themselves: AWT stands for Abstract Window Toolkit which implies that the Toolkit is abstract and requires an actual implementation sun awt windows WToolkit is such an implementation for the Microsoft Windows plattform hence the W in its name
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