September 2005
Beginner
576 pages
13h 6m
English
Because Java is a cross-platform language that enables you to write programs for many different operating systems, its windowing software must be flexible. Instead of catering only to the Microsoft Windows-style of windowing or the Apple Macintosh version, it must handle both along with other platforms.
With Java, the development of a program's user interface is based on two sets of classes: the Abstract Windowing Toolkit and Swing. These classes enable you to create a graphical user interface and receive input from the user.
Swing and the Abstract Windowing Toolkit include everything you need to write programs that use a graphical user interface, which is also called a GUI (pronounced gooey, as in Huey, ...
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