JavaFX8 on iPhone! It works!
Herve Girod
herve.girod at gmail.com
Sun Jul 7 05:35:52 PDT 2013
IMO relying on the Android API is not the way to go on the long run.
The current Android "Java" API is already trailing behind Java 7, and it's
heavily dependent on Google's good will, who is the only one who can decide
on how this API will evolve. If they decide one day to change completely
the API, or get rid of their Java VM, or deprecate it and don't support it
anymore (like Microsoft did for many of their libraries), they can.
Another reason is that Mobile development is not synonymous to Android
development.
2013/7/6 Daniel Zwolenski <zonski at gmail.com>
> As the platform architect, what direction would you suggest the community
> take to make JFX work on iOS and on Android?
>
> If Oracle came to their senses and said: "Richard, that whole smart device
> space might actually be more than a passing fad, let's put jfx on it, and
> do it whatever way you think best", what would your implementation strategy
> look like?
>
> Would you backport or use another VM or do your own VM impl, or what? How
> long would you expect whatever strategy you'd pick to take, how many
> resources would you have on it, and what bits would you see needing the
> most attention, what would your milestones look like, etc. I don't see why
> Oracle not doing this doesn't mean we can't get your guidance and wisdom on
> this if you're willing to provide it.
>
> And looking particularly here beyond hello worlds and brick breaker demos,
> at a sustainable robust, performant platform that can be used and relied
> upon for commercial use both now and as java 8, 9, 10 etc come out.
>
> I get the feeling were a long long way from that, if indeed it's
> achievable. What's your view on this?
>
>
>
> On 06/07/2013, at 12:34 PM, Richard Bair <richard.bair at oracle.com> wrote:
>
> > It's complicated. We've prototyped on all kinds of VMs including the CVM
> used with ADF mobile and a hacked up Java SE embedded 7. It's a long way
> from prototype to product and as I mentioned on my blog we have not
> announced any plan around SE embedded VM on iOS / Android. But at least we
> know that our port of fx was (mostly) functional and could be successful.
> >
> > On Jul 5, 2013, at 12:44 PM, Tobias Bley <tobi at ultramixer.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Richard, the question is: Has Oracle a hidden Java8 VM for Android and
> iOS? Or how do you test your Android and iOS JavaFX implementation???
> >>
> >>
> >> Am 05.07.2013 um 16:42 schrieb Richard Bair <richard.bair at oracle.com>:
> >>
> >>> We have implementations for Android and iOS that are both functional
> on a Java 8 VM. It looks like, because the iOS one is so closely related to
> the Mac build, it was the easiest one to get a build for the open
> community. We're working on the Android build scripts. The situation on
> Android is exactly the same as iOS -- we're open sourcing the library code,
> but not a Java 8 VM. I would expect that if the iOS build on RoboVM works,
> that the Android build for RoboVM would also work, but I haven't tried it.
> >>>
> >>> Richard
> >>>
> >>> On Jul 5, 2013, at 5:07 AM, Daniel Zwolenski <zonski at gmail.com> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> Thanks Niklas - sounds like there's still a bit to do.
> >>>>
> >>>> I'm still a bit confused though, I thought the JFX team were/are
> giving us a version of jfx that is specifically designed to work on Android
> but it sounds like that's pretty far from the actuality? What will the
> gradle build for android actually give us?
> >>>>
> >>>> I'd be keen to hear from someone on the jfx side on all of this. Is
> this how you planned for your smart device releases to work or has
> something gone wrong in the journey here?
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> On 05/07/2013, at 9:57 PM, Niklas Therning <niklas at therning.org>
> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> <mime-attachment.txt>
> >>
>
>
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