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JavaFX Links of July 2024

July 31, 2024

Author(s)

  • Avatar photo
    Frank Delporte

    Frank Delporte (@frankdelporte) is a Java Champion, Java Developer, Technical Writer at Azul, Blogger, Author of "Getting started with Java on Raspberry Pi", and Pi4J Contributor. Frank blogs about his ... Learn more

Here is the overview of the JavaFX LinksOfTheMonth of July 2024, published on jfx-central.com during this month.

Core

  • A message by Kevin Rushforth on the [email protected] mailing list shows the Java/JavaFX release train is approaching the next station ;-): "Bump the version number of JavaFX to 24. I will integrate this to master as part of forking the jfx23 stabilization branch, which is scheduled for Thursday, July 11, 2024 at 16:00 UTC." We're looking forward to the release of v23 in September!

Applications

Games

Components, Libraries, Tools

  • Pedro Duke shared a video: "A bunch of changes coming to Transit Theme... One of them is that if you change it to Dark style it will also change the Window frame of where the theme is applied. (JavaFX always shows the Window frame in light color)"
    • And Pedro published a new post: "Transit Version 2.0 Released": "Styles work as User Agent Stylesheets like Modena (much easier to override) + True Dark Mode (Window frame also changes when set to Dark style)."
  • Dirk Lemmermann shared a screenshot of an implementation of the FlexGanttFX library: "We use it in our energy CRM system to visualise the consumption data provided by the home-installed electricity smart meters of our customers. In addition, it shows the time when our backend services send a request to the meters to send their data and which time periods they requested."

Podcasts, Videos, Books

Tutorials

Miscellaneous

  • Mark Fortner replies to a message by Justin Fagnani about Flutter: "It’s always interesting watching people re-invent the future. JavaFX has all of the features that you describe. Scenegraphs, multilanguage support, compiles to WASM, CSS. I think it really boils down to one’s willingness to get out of one’s comfort stack."
  • A new video by Christopher Schnick: "The JavaFX 22 platform preferences API in action with native window themes on Windows 11."
    • Christopher also reports: "Seems like JavaFX applications run fine on Windows ARM systems through the x86_64 compatibility layer."
  • Gerrit Grunwald shared a screenshot of a private project ("sorry not allowed to share...") which recreates the QLOCKTWO in JavaFX.
  • Chris is wondering: "Why are large displays in public spaces, including electronic ordering screens windows based?! It should be JavaFX territory running lightweight Linux on an SOC device."

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Author(s)

  • Avatar photo
    Frank Delporte

    Frank Delporte (@frankdelporte) is a Java Champion, Java Developer, Technical Writer at Azul, Blogger, Author of "Getting started with Java on Raspberry Pi", and Pi4J Contributor. Frank blogs about his ... Learn more

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