Dear Lawrence,
Quaqua does not need to be installed. Simply put the file quaqua.jar and
libquaqua.jnilib into your application bundle.
If you do it this way, it is granted, that your application gets the right
version, and conflicts with other applications using other versions of
Quaqua won't arise.
In case Quaqua's jar files are too big for your application, you can also
use a subset of it. e.g. put the file quaqua-filechooser.jar and
libquaqua.jnilib into your bundle.
In case you don't want to ship a separate jar bundle, simply integrate the
contents of the quaqua.jar (or quaqua-filechooser.jar) into your application
jar. (You can even leave the liqbquaqua.jnilib file away).
-Werner
On 5/30/05 2:01 AM, "Lawrence Nussbaum" at <email@hidden> wrote:
> A few people have replied mentioning QuaQua...
>
> QuaQua would be a solution if it was already on the users computer (in
> the right place, right version, etc. etc. etc.). But we're trying to keep
> the software simple as possible, so its not really something we're
> comfortable with on any platform. We're trying to make something that
> 'just works'.
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