This question already has answers here:
What is Java's answer to WPF? [closed]
(3 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
Is there an Java equivalent to the WPF platform?
No, but there is JavaFX which can be compared to Flash/Flex & SilverLight
The most likely answer is Soyatec's eFace. It supports several key features of WPF. It uses XAML and databinding, so you can apply MVVM and test your ViewModel. Also it supports templating.
Also, this is used in Eclipse e4.
JavaFX is SUN's trial to compete with WPF.
It can be used in both Applets and Desktop applications
You can see this comparison
Please take a look at Qt Jambi. It uses the Qt framework:
http://qt-jambi.org/
Related
This question already has answers here:
Embedded Prolog Interpreter/Compiler for Java
(13 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
I hope my question is not a duplicate... I have implemented some rules using Prolog. I would like to ask if there is any way to use these rules in a java application. I do not want to implement everything in java from scratch. I would like to embed the code written in Prolog in a java application. Thanks in advance.
There are various ways. But judging from your question you're looking for a quick solution.
JPL (since i notice a lot of people are using SWI nowadays):
http://www.swi-prolog.org/FAQ/Java.html
The GNU Prolog library for Java:
http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuprologjava/
SICtus (It comes with syntax examples, etc so it shouldn't be hard for you to use it quickly)
http://sicstus.sics.se/sicstus/docs/3.7.1/html/sicstus_12.html
tuProlog (Said to be the easiest to use, beginner friendly)
http://www.alice.unibo.it/xwiki/bin/view/Tuprolog/
This question already has answers here:
What is Java's answer to WPF? [closed]
(3 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
We are doing an evaluation of what to use for client technology, I was wondering what Java has to offer.
I know that this is a close duplicate to this question:
What is Java's answer to WPF?
But the answer in the above question is over 2 years old, so the answer today could be different.
This 2011 Java wil lunch JavaFX 2.0, you will use the JavaFX API's with core Java language instead of the JavaFX Script in 1.x versions.
I concur with the others here that JavaFX was probably intended to be Sun's answer to WPF and Silverlight, but it's never quite reached the standard that Microsoft's technologies have.
Another Java alternative to Silverlight is BlazeDS and Spring BlazeDS which use a Java application server as the backend, and Adobe Flash as the client (using Flex). I've never used it, but the combination looks pretty similar to using Silverlight.
JavaFX is in full swing and Oracle has already made early access release available. More answers can be found here, but surely a competitor is in the making that will give its counterpart a tough time soon
I think that JavaFX still lives. You can check Eclipse Rich Ajax Platform too. I think this is suitaible answer to Silverlight.
This question already has answers here:
Closed 12 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
How can I convert OO Perl to Java?
Hello.
I have a perl script and I want to translate it to Java.
Is there any translator/conversor from perl script to Java?
By the way, I'm developing an Android 2.2 application.
EDIT
I have closed the question. Stop downvoting me!!!!!! And if you downvote tell us why!!
Thanks.
You should consider using the Android Scripting Environment so that you can just use your Perl script rather than having to "translate" it to Java (especially if you plan on relying on some translation tool to do it).
It supports Perl, along with Python, Ruby, and some others.
Just my two cents...
I would convert the Perl to Java by hand that way you are 100% in control of the Java code running in your Android application and that way you will understand what the Perl code is actually doing rather than relying on it to work when there is a bug in your Android app.
No. There's the JPL project from the 90's that might've been a workaround, but I'm pretty sure it fell apart along the road.
This question already has answers here:
Closed 11 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
Java : Is there a good natural language processing library
are there any known open source distributions that one can use like nltk for python?
GATE is the most famous industry-level librarywith a java implementation I can think of.
It is truly powerful.
Otherwise:
OpenNLP
LingPipe
Xerox used to have a set of nice online tools as well, but I don't know if they have a Java implementation or any accessible web-services for them.
This question already has answers here:
Is there a good natural language processing library [closed]
(3 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
Are there any equally great packages like Python's NTLK in Java world ?
Two popular ones that I know of are:
Gate
OpenNLP
Also LingPipe is really nice.
Stanford has a very good collection of NLP tools.
For other JVM languages see
Scala: Scala NLP
Clojure: clojure-opennlp
ClearTK provides a Java framework for doing statistical NLP. Its strength is not so much in its libraries, but in providing the infrastructure and wrappers for rich feature extraction and model training.