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Qt has been developed by people who understand UI and the desktop while SWT has been developed out of necessity to make Eclipse faster. It's more a performance patch for Java 1.4 than a UI framework. Without JFace, you're missing many major UI components or very important features of UI components (like filtering on tables).
I am looking for some framework or toolkit (style drag and drop) for creating gui in Java. I need to do quite complex application with dockings, toolbars, tables etc.
Also GWT (Google Web Toolkit) is a great UI framework. I would say GWT and JSF are comparable in ramp up time for learning. Both of these frameworks work great with a Java EE project, and they even work great for a non-enterprise project, so it's really up to you after you familiarize yourself with them. good luck!
Wicket/Java UI framework Development. 36 Spring MVC & UI Components. 0 Spring mvc 3 Web app design ...
Googling the subject pretty much only results in tutorials on how to use BufferedReader and the likes to do rudimentary interaction with the user, aimed at people learning the basics of Java and writing simple UI that asks for name and prints "Hello World!" etc..
Background. I am somewhat new to Java and am enjoying using IntelliJ IDE developed by the JetBrains team. I have downloaded the source for the Community Edition, and I am trying to work out what GUI libraries they are using to get the look-and-feel.
I think the issue is that you using jackson 2.10.4 and the plugin uses 2.9.9. Having the same issue, but I'm playing with play2.8 and swagger-play2 - 3.0.0(pull request for supporting play 2.8).
This is based on groovy language and inspired by grails framework. It runs on JVM, language is very much friendly for java programmers. Quote from the site. Griffon is an application framework for developing desktop applications in the JVM, with Groovy being the primary language of choice.
I have used JSF, maybe with the wrong library (myfaces, tomahawk, trinidad + jsp), and I had no(!) good experiences. myface was buggy. javascript support was a mess, although I tried a lot libs. so someone has to pay me a lot before I use this for own projects ;-). creating own components is a lot more complicated than with wicket or vaadin ...
Use whatever UI framework you like (Swing comes "for free" with Java). Use whatever IDE you prefer (I'm a fan of IDEA products). Use the libraries that help you accomplish your tasks more easily (are we really expected to be mind-readers?). Third-party libraries can distributed (see their distribution license) and/or combined with the main JAR ...