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This is a comparison of widget engines. This article is not about widget toolkits that are used in computer programming to build graphical user interfaces.
General^ The Yahoo! Widget Engine was originally released by Arlo Rose and Ed Voas as Konfabulator. The name was changed several months after Yahoo! acquired the software in July 2005. Platform
^ Early versions of Windows Sidebar have been successfully ported to Windows XP, though this activity is forbidden under the EULA. ^ The current version of Samurize (1.64.2) runs on Vista but there are a few minor issues that need to be worked out, such as security dialog prompts. ^ Google Desktop for Linux can search the desktop but does not support Google Desktop Gadgets. TechnicalLanguagesWhat programming languages the engines support. Most engines rely upon interpreted languages.
^ Amazing Brass has a custom programming language and compiler, known as Shiny, for easy creation of plugins. Compatible plugins written in any other language capable of producing a DLL can also be used. ^ AveDesk can be extended using AveScripter, which supports plugins written with XML and Javascript, extended using CSS. ^ Widgets for Kapsules and Serious Samurize can be written in any scripting language for which there is an ActiveScript engine, including PHP, JScript, VBScript and Ruby. ^ This is only relevant for Opera's extensions; the web browser itself supports HTML, CSS and others. ^ Samurize supports DLLs compiled with C++, Delphi, PowerBASIC, and FreeBasic, among others. HTML/XML/CSS support can be added by using certain plugins. ^ Yahoo! Widget Engine supports Perl and Python indirectly through the use of the shell, provided that the interpreters are installed on the machine (on Mac OS X, they are by default). ^ gDesklets might support Perl scripting through PyPerl [1] in the next major version. ^ The next major version of gDesklets will support Yahoo! Widgets. Thus, JavaScript support will be included, too. ^ gDesklets will provide some CSS like dialect in the next major version. ^ KlipFolio supports custom styles using CSS syntax. ^ Yahoo! Widget Engine can interface with COM (windows) or AppleScript (Mac OS) ^ Dashboard uses a technology called Cocoa Plugins.This allows for Objective-C code to be used through the plugin. The plugin is written with Cocoa and is compiled. Formats and Development
Development ToolsAs widgets are largely combinations of HTML or XHTML, CSS, and Javascript in most cases, standard AJAX tools, such as Eclipse ATF, can be used for development. Specialized tools may give access to additional capabilities supplied by frameworks such as Dojo or Openrico. An API-creating tool such as Dapper can allow the creation of a "universal" widget from content on any website. IDE: Apple Dashcode, Eclipse ATF, and Google Desktop. Microsoft Gadget and Yahoo! Widgets have documentation, but no IDE to aid development. |
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