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- JavaFX
JavaFX, also known as OpenJFX, is free software; licensed under the GPL with the class path exception, just like the OpenJDK JavaFX applications can target desktop, mobile and embedded systems Libraries and software are available for the entire life-cycle of an application
- JavaFX 24 Highlights - openjfx. io
Running a JavaFX application on JDK 24 will produce a warning from each of the three JavaFX modules that rely on native access, due to the changes specified in JEP 472
- JavaFX 23 Highlights - openjfx. io
JavaFX 23 Highlights JavaFX version 23 has been released We’ve tailored down some of the most exciting parts of the release in this document JavaFX 23 Requires JDK 21 or later JavaFX 23 is compiled with --release 21 and thus requires JDK 21 or later in order to run
- JavaFX 21 Highlights
JavaFX 21 Highlights JavaFX version 21 has been released We’ve tailored down some of the most exciting parts of the release in this document JavaFX 21 requires macOS 11 or later On Mac platforms, JavaFX 21 requires macOS 11 or later An exception will be thrown when initializing the JavaFX runtime on older versions of macOS
- Getting Started with JavaFX
JavaFX allows you to create Java applications with a modern, hardware-accelerated user interface that is highly portable There is detailed reference documentation for JavaFX, and this short tutorial will show you how to write a JavaFX 24 application
- JavaFX 20 Highlights
JavaFX 20 Highlights JavaFX version 20 has been released We’ve tailored down some of the most exciting parts of the release in this document JavaFX 20 Requires JDK 17 or Later JavaFX 20 is compiled with --release 17 and thus requires JDK 17 or later in order to run
- JavaFX 22 Highlights
JavaFX 22 Highlights JavaFX version 22 has been released We’ve tailored down some of the most exciting parts of the release in this document Exciting features: New APIs: Platform preferences API to fetch UI settings of the operating system
- Overview (JavaFX 17)
Overview (JavaFX 17) module index
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