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Qalculate! supports common mathematical functions and operations, multiple bases, autocompletion, complex numbers, infinite numbers, arrays and matrices, variables, mathematical and physical constants, user-defined functions, symbolic derivation and integration, solving of equations involving unknowns, uncertainty propagation using interval arithmetic, plotting using Gnuplot, unit and currency ...
The GTK-server provides a stream-oriented interface to GTK.If the GTK-server is compiled as a standalone program binary, it allows five different interfaces: standard input (stdin), first in, first out (FIFO) (), inter-process communication (IPC) (message queue), Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), or User Datagram Protocol (UDP).
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Instant messaging clients that use GTK (11 P) ... Packet analyzer software that uses GTK (2 P) R.
GTK (formerly GIMP ToolKit [2] and GTK+ [3]) is a free software cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces (GUIs). [4] It is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License , allowing both free and proprietary software to use it.
Despite the immense popularity of Qt, there continues to be science software using the GUI widgets of version 2 of GTK toolkit. Whether this is going to remain that way, or whether the software will be ported to some current version of GTK (maybe GTK 4) remains to be seen. Ghemical – computational chemistry software package
gtkmm (formerly known as gtk--or gtk minus minus [1]) is the official C++ interface for the popular GUI library GTK. gtkmm is free software distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL). gtkmm allows the creation of user interfaces either in code or with the Glade Interface Designer, using the Gtk::Builder
GDK (GIMP Drawing Kit) is a library that acts as a wrapper around the low-level functions provided by the underlying windowing and graphics systems. GDK lies between the display server and the GTK library, handling basic rendering such as drawing primitives, raster graphics (bitmaps), cursors, fonts, as well as window events and drag-and-drop functionality.
In version 4.0.0, released 25 September 2003, Xfce was upgraded to use the GTK 2 libraries. [21] Changes in 4.2.0, released 16 January 2005, included a compositing manager for Xfwm which added built-in support for transparency and drop shadows, as well as a new default SVG icon set. [22] [23] In January 2007, Xfce 4.4.0 was released.