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fpGUI, the Free Pascal GUI toolkit, is a cross-platform graphical user interface toolkit developed by Graeme Geldenhuys. fpGUI is open source and free software, licensed under a Modified LGPL license. The toolkit has been implemented using the Free Pascal compiler, meaning it is written in the Object Pascal language.
Interaction of class libraries and widgetsets in Lazarus and Free Pascal. The Free Component Library, abbreviated FCL, is a software component library for Free Pascal.. The FCL consists of a collection of units that provide components and classes for general programming tasks.
This article provides a list of widget toolkits (also known as GUI frameworks), used to construct the graphical user interface (GUI) of programs, organized by their relationships with various operating systems.
The LCL consists of a collection of units that provide components and classes especially for visual tasks. It is based on the Free Pascal libraries RTL and FCL.By binding platform-specific widgetsets it supports platform-sensitive software development for several operating systems including Android, Desktop Linux, Mac OS X and Windows.
In 1995 Borland released Delphi, its first release of an Object Pascal IDE and language. Up until that point, Borland's Turbo Pascal for DOS and Windows was largely a procedural language, with minimal object-oriented features, and building UI frameworks with the language required using frameworks like Turbo Vision and Object Windows Library.
This is a list of notable library packages implementing a graphical user interface (GUI) platform-independent GUI library (PIGUI). These can be used to develop software that can be ported to multiple computing platforms with no change to its source code.
Free Pascal Compiler (FPC) is a compiler for the closely related programming-language dialects Pascal and Object Pascal. It is free software released under the GNU General Public License , with exception clauses that allow static linking against its runtime libraries and packages for any purpose in combination with any other software license.
It is a fully object-oriented programming user interface management system, [2] using the Common Lisp Object System (CLOS) and is based on the mechanism of stream input and output. [3] There are also facilities for output device independence. It is descended from the GUI system Dynamic Windows [4] of Symbolics' Lisp machines between 1988 and 1993.