cdr wrote:
since this thread is so GTK+-centric i'll chime in
and say ive found nothing i like for easily creating customized/flexible GUIs more than
Tcl/Tk [...]
Not to forget there's also Gnocl which lets you program Gnome and GTK+
applications in Tcl:
http://www.dr-baum.net/gnocl/
I've actually written a GUI builder for that which makes it possible to
click together simple Gnocl GUIs in a matter of minutes. (Currently the
builder only generates Q code, see below, but tacking on a Tcl backend
to it shouldn't be a big deal.)
I'm not sure how well Tcl integrates with MIDI, OSC and digital audio,
though. So, if you want/need to write the rest of the program in C then
Tcl might not be that helpful, unless you're willing to fiddle around
with SWIG (
http://www.swig.org) or Tcl's C interface.
Shameless plug: Those interested in scripting languages might also
consider Q (
http://q-lang.sf.net) which already has interfaces to
PortAudio, libsndfile, libsamplerate, Faust, MidiShare, SuperCollider,
OpenGL/OpenAL, Tcl/Tk/Gnocl and whatnot. This has the added benefit that
it's a functional language which makes it easy to deal with complex data
structures and symbolic processing. I'm currently doing the final
touches for the Q 7.0 release which also has full unicode support and
comes with the GUI builder I mentioned above. Scheduled to be released
Real Soon Now -- surely in time for LAC06. ;-)
once going beyond sortable lists and selectorboxes,
youre going to end up with some kind of canvas
Yes, having a good canvas widget certainly helps, and Tk has a nice one.
The one in Gnocl provides a similar interface while it is based on GNOME
Canvas. (Looks like GNOME Canvas isn't liked very much by some, but I
found it to be quite usable, at least in its Gnocl incarnation.)
Albert
--
Dr. Albert Gr"af
Dept. of Music-Informatics, University of Mainz, Germany
Email: Dr.Graef(a)t-online.de, ag(a)muwiinfa.geschichte.uni-mainz.de
WWW:
http://www.musikinformatik.uni-mainz.de/ag