> Both Qt and GTK have facilities for integrating into each other’s desktop environments
Neither Qt nor GTK are desktop environments and Qt certainly isn’t defined by a dominant desktop environment - KDE isn’t even what pays their bills.
You’re still proving my point. The common denominator here (on Linux) is just X11/Wayland. If it works out “pretty okay”, then score one for a cross platform toolkit. Still no idea what über alles “native” means.
Let’s go back to the original comment I responded to… why should I not just continue with the Qt “stupid” “hobbyhorse”
Neither Qt nor GTK are desktop environments and Qt certainly isn’t defined by a dominant desktop environment - KDE isn’t even what pays their bills.
You’re still proving my point. The common denominator here (on Linux) is just X11/Wayland. If it works out “pretty okay”, then score one for a cross platform toolkit. Still no idea what über alles “native” means.
Let’s go back to the original comment I responded to… why should I not just continue with the Qt “stupid” “hobbyhorse”