Java GUI frameworks. What to choose? Swing, SWT, AWT, SwingX, JGoodies, JavaFX, Apache Pivot? [closed]

Decision tree:

  1. Frameworks like Qt and SWT need native DLLs. So you have to ask yourself: Are all necessary platforms supported? Can you package the native DLLs with your app?

    See here, how to do this for SWT.

    If you have a choice here, you should prefer Qt over SWT. 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).

    If SWT is missing a feature that you need, the framework is somewhat hostile to extending it. For example, you can’t extend any class in it (the classes aren’t final, they just throw exceptions when the package of this.getClass() isn’t org.eclipse.swt and you can’t add new classes in that package because it’s signed).

  2. If you need a native, pure Java solution, that leaves you with the rest. Let’s start with AWT, Swing, SwingX – the Swing way.

    AWT is outdated. Swing is outdated (maybe less so but not much work has been done on Swing for the past 10 years). You could argue that Swing was good to begin with but we all know that code rots. And that’s especially true for UIs today.

    That leaves you with SwingX. After a longer period of slow progress, development has picked up again. The major drawback with Swing is that it hangs on to some old ideas which very kind of bleeding edge 15 years ago but which feel “clumsy” today. For example, the table views do support filtering and sorting but you still have to configure this. You’ll have to write a lot of boiler plate code just to get a decent UI that feels modern.

    Another weak area is theming. As of today, there are a lot of themes around. See here for a top 10. But some are slow, some are buggy, some are incomplete. I hate it when I write a UI and users complain that something doesn’t work for them because they selected an odd theme.

  3. JGoodies is another layer on top of Swing, like SwingX. It tries to make Swing more pleasant to use. The web site looks great. Let’s have a look at the tutorial … hm … still searching … hang on. It seems that there is no documentation on the web site at all. Google to the rescue. Nope, no useful tutorials at all.

    I’m not feeling confident with a UI framework that tries so hard to hide the documentation from potential new fans. That doesn’t mean JGoodies is bad; I just couldn’t find anything good to say about it but that it looks nice.

  4. JavaFX. Great, stylish. Support is there but I feel it’s more of a shiny toy than a serious UI framework. This feeling roots in the lack of complex UI components like tree tables. There is a webkit-based component to display HTML.

    When it was introduced, my first thought was “five years too late.” If your aim is a nice app for phones or web sites, good. If your aim is professional desktop application, make sure it delivers what you need.

  5. Pivot. First time I heard about it. It’s basically a new UI framework based on Java2D. So I gave it a try yesterday. No Swing, just tiny bit of AWT (new Font(...)).

    My first impression was a nice one. There is an extensive documentation that helps you getting started. Most of the examples come with live demos (Note: You must have Java enabled in your web browser; this is a security risk) in the web page, so you can see the code and the resulting application side by side.

    In my experience, more effort goes into code than into documentation. By looking at the Pivot docs, a lot of effort must have went into the code. Note that there is currently a bug which prevents some of the examples to work (PIVOT-858) in your browser.

    My second impression of Pivot is that it’s easy to use. When I ran into a problem, I could usually solve it quickly by looking at an example. I’m missing a reference of all the styles which each component supports, though.

    As with JavaFX, it’s missing some higher level components like a tree table component (PIVOT-306). I didn’t try lazy loading with the table view. My impression is that if the underlying model uses lazy loading, then that’s enough.

    Promising. If you can, give it a try.

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