Is it possible to use the concurrency visualizer when developing for the UWP?
I've installed the plugin but i can't seem to get it working.
Yes you can. Just use the Attach to process.. option to connect to a running UWP app.
Related
I am invoking C++ UIautomation modules in my UWP application. The application is not able to extract control elements since it is not running in an elevated environment. How should I set up the manifest file or set my UWP app to be able to get access to ui elements of other applications.
I'd suggest that you could put the UIautomation modules into a console app and then launch the console as elevated from your UWP app using desktop bridge. You will also need to add the allowElevation capability into the manifest file.
For detailed steps, you could take a look at Stefan wick's blog- App Elevation Samples.
I need advice about the best way to make an application (written in c++/mfc) communicate with an extension in chrome (I am also studying edge chromium)
As far as I understand, the native application that the extension can communicate with by using native host messaging is launched by chrome. As my win32 application is launched by the user and not by chrome, I need the native application to be a third component, launched by chrome.
What is the best way to let my win32 application communicate with my native app ? Making it a COM server is a good idea ?
I have searched on the other posts but they often talk about the native app talking to another app, not the other way.
Thank you
I would like to access Bluetooth LE devices using the corresponding UWP APIs. However, my application is a "classic" C++ application (3D game) that can't run as a UWP app. Is there a way to do that? Accorind to enter link description here these APIs are published, but I don't know the steps to access them I have only found some posts for Windows 8/8.1 apps that include the Windows.winmd and Platform.winmd metadata files and set the /ZW compilation flag, but this doesn't seem to apply to Windows 10.
You should be able to do this, as the Bluetooth classes (e.g., BluetoothLEAdvertisement) are marked up with DualApiPartitionAttribute (callable from desktop and UWP apps).
Using one of the older Win8.1 desktop samples should give you a good starting point for calling the APIs without requiring /ZW or referencing the winmd files. A good example is the desktop toast API sample.
If you go that route, you can use classic COM to create the UWP/WinRT classes via WRL helpers.
You can use the web that you make a web server and the C++ application use the same server and if UWP send the info to server then it will send the info to C++ application.
To safe,the UWP can't use the desktop app.
How to make Django projects packaged as desktop applications?
I found some tutorials, but is there any solution as DjangoKit , for Linux and Windows?
List of related tutorials :
Deploying a Django app on the desktop
Django application as a stand-alone desktop application
This project started when I needed to
distribute a self contained user
installable Windows demo of a Django
application
dbuilder.py
Edit: Another alternative is Super Zippy, it takes a Python package and its pure Python dependencies and transforms them all into a single executable file.
You might want to look into Appcelerator's (link) Titanium Desktop for developing web apps on the desktop.
It's fully cross platform, Linux, Mac OSX, Windows.
It's supports running Python, Ruby, and JavaScript code in your application all concurrently interacting with one anther in one application. It's pretty sweet.
(Full disclosure, I'm the founder of ToDesktop. I think this is a helpful answer though)
If your Django app is already deployed as a web app then you can wrap the web app in Electron.
If the web app does not need to be distributed to users (i.e.. you don't need an installer or code signing) then Nativefier is great for that. It's free and open-source. I made a Nativefier guide here.
If you're distributing to users then you'll probably want an installer and code signing and auto-updates for Electron. ToDesktop will do all that for you without any coding or configuration.
There's a comparison of the two here.
I'm not familiar with Qt or with Google Native Client. Is it possible for a TRIVIAL Qt console application to be ported to Google Native Client? I understand that some work would be involved. But the question is, how much if it's even possible?
A Qt developer has managed to get some Qt examples running under Native Client:
http://blog.qt.io/blog/2009/12/17/take-it-with-a-grain-of-salt/
Qt now has an official Native Client SDK:
http://qt-project.org/wiki/Qt_for_Google_Native_Client
Qt for Google Native Client Preview also updated here: http://qt-project.org/wiki/Qt_for_Google_Native_Client
Since you can't use system calls, you'd need to essentially port Qt to a new OS (ie, Native Client). This'll be a lot of work - good luck!
For those who are interested in using Qt with NaCl, I have made a Docker image containing Qt compiled with NaCl :
Link to Docker Image
You will just need to follow the instructions to get your application compiled.
There is also a video showing the process of compiling Qt with NaCl. At the end of this video, there is an example:
Link to video of Qt compiled with NaCl
Hope this help