[Poll] What percentage of your development is Qt related?
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pretty much 100% of the things I write on my own time are Qt but job has me writing python, shell scripts, etc. in addition to Qt.
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About 75%, the other part is C/C++ OpenCL parallel software.
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When I first answered the poll, it was still 75%+. Now, it is considerably less, as the current product I work on has only the UI done with Qt, and even that is going though an abstraction layer.
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I do around 90% development on Java EE 6 for highly scalable systems that use mostly desktop and web applications for client interaction (very little mobile requirements yet).
I use Qt 10% of the time, and mostly experimenting on what it would take for me to do the same things in Qt that I currently do in Java, too bad that C++ libraries are still lacking compared to what I do on Java EE (currently I use it for automotive and banking).
I found some replacements for the distributed, highly scalable parts of the systems (ZeroC ICE products, but it's GPL or commercial and quite expensive, and Oracle GlassFish is a lot more flexible licensed), but for deployment and Web communications, still no luck (would be cool to have a good fastcgi or scgi implementation in Qt, I tried some opensource projects but are very old or lacking basic functionality).
Object serialization has really improved in Qt, with QObjects and XML you can go really far, and for Qt5 there's a new serialization module for supporting JSON as well, but still, I think to make it as easy as JAXB in Java, it would take some time and dedication, but with QML stealing all the trolls attention, it's going to be hard to go there anytime soon.
For the desktop client side, Qt is really on top of Java swing, but, there are A LOT of components, both open source and commercial for swing, which Qt is lacking, i.e. a diagramming component, a very-rich-eye-candy charting, an iCal/Outlook like calendar component, a MS Project like gantt/scheduler component (more modern looking, I've seen KDABs and it looks like made in the windows 3.11 days), or text visual diff component (something like that would be useful in Qt, specially for Qt Creator that still has text only diff).
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'im working in Qt only ...
I am certified in Delphi and VB, but I do not remember them anymore, now it's only Qt
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[quote author="Vass" date="1294323868"]I write applications only on Qt now.[/quote]
Same here!
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All my serious projects are based on C++/Qt or PyQt, for the rest, ie. quick test scripts, I use Python + standard libraries.
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Its about 40%
the other parts is maintaining projects on VB and C#
but now we are focusing on multiplatform projects, and i think the Qt percentage will be grow. -
About 50 % of time I spend on Qt development.
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75% of my C/C++ programming is QT related and 25% is SDL related :)
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We use 90% of C++/Qt/QML and 10% of Boost.
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Less than 10% (only for personal projects). Unfortunately that means that my Qt learning is slow going.
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~10%
But again, it depends. Half a year ago I was working 100% only with Qt.
Currently I'm mostly using C# ( Mono) and asp.net and a lot of SQL. From time to time php and Java if I really have to.
Currently I'm using Qt only for personal projects. -
I would say 80-90% developing in Qt...
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90%. When I find code examples that aren't Qt and I don't want to use them for web development, I always start the process of converting the code to use pure Qt. The only other development I do is occasional html/java/php development on websites.
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Most of my development is in Qt. The rest is a collection of languages ( Assembly, C, and some Common Lisp).
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I work as a developer, using Qt. But after work, I'm a webdesigner/creator as well. So there goes some time in as well. (HTML, CSS, PHP, ...)
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