Feature added by: Tomas Cech (sleep_walker)
Feature #319522, revision 1
Title: use terminal for build
Buildservice: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Desirable
Requested by: Tomas Cech (sleep_walker)
Partner organization: openSUSE.org
Description:
Add support for running build within terminal. For some packages like ncurses, bash, tcsh, clisp (and probably for more where maintainer even didn't notice) configure running in terminal gives different results than running without it. Package maintainers are able to workaround this issue using screen or similar tools but it makes the spec file harder to understand and thus maintain.
It would be nice to add this feature directly into build system and expose such feature to package maintainers.
--
openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/319522
Feature added by: Eric Benton (erbenton)
Feature #319500, revision 1
Title: add package wxFormBuilder
Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Desirable
Requested by: Eric Benton (erbenton)
Partner organization: openSUSE.org
Description:
wxFormBuilder (GPLv2) is a RAD IDE that offers the following features Visual design of wxWidgets dialogs, frames, panels, toolbars and menubars Source code generation for C++, Python, PHP, Lua and XRC Support for wxWidgets 3.0 widgets (wxRibbonBar, wxPropertyGrid, wxDataViewCtrl, and more Available from Ubuntu PPA (ppa:wxformbuilder/release, ppa:wxformbuilder/wxwidgets) Available from wxPack (https://github.com/rjpcomputing/wxpack/wiki)
Business case (Partner benefit):
openSUSE.org: This allows you to build GUI applications by drag and drop of windows components (e.g you drag a button onto a form or whatever widget you need and place it where you want it) and supports both C++, Python and PHP so it would appeal to a wide base. I don't believe there is any other RAD IDE out there like this for Linux. This kind of a package opens up Linux GUI programming to many people who otherwise don't want to tackle the difficulty of hand coding GUI apps.
--
openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/319500