Yes.
Did you try GTK ?
GTK (GNU Widget Toolkit) is a widget toolkit common in Linux and modern Unix environments. It is freely-licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, and used to create notable programs such as GIMP, Mozilla Firefox, and Pidgin. AWT (Abstract Widget Toolkit) is a widget toolkit used by many Java applications.The widgets themselves normally take on characteristics of widgets from the host operating system (be it Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux), though it can also use Swing to provide its own user interface. When used in conjunction with each other, it probably refers to libraries used by the Java program to provide a GTK look and feel on a Linux or Unix system.
That's a very low-level question, that can't really be done justice outside of a programming course. Basically, most desktop environments in Linux run on top of an X server, which is in charge of basic rendering and acceleration, as well as receiving input from a keyboard / mouse. The actual interface is built using objects from a "widget" toolkit. Widgets are things like scrollbars, buttons, and text boxes. These widgets form the look and feel of the environment, be it KDE (Qt toolkit), GNOME (GTK+ toolkit), Xfce (GTK+ toolkit), or JWM (Xaw toolkit) and so on. The environment may also provide various IPC methods (such as D-BUS), or it may be left by the applications themselves to implement.
Gnome.
Xfce is a GTK+ based desktop environment for Linux. It is similar in many respects to GNOME, but is designed to use less RAM.
gtk
GTK-server was created in 2003.
Gtk-gnutella was created on 2000-04-16.
try re-installing gtk+ with the command: sudo apt-get install gtk2-engines-pixbuf as admin. then go to settings (the wrench) > Options > Personal Stuff > Appearance > Use Gtk+ theme if gtk+ theme is grey, then try restarting chrome and then trying again, If that doesn't work, try restarting your computer and then trying again. if it is STILL grey, sorry, cant help.
This depends on the API you are using. Most frameworks or toolkits like Qt or GTK+ already provide easy ways to create and display a window. OpenGL by itself actually cannot create windows, only interfaces between OGL and the windowing system can do that. On Linux, this interface is known as GLX. But most OpenGL programmers insead do this through SDL or GLUT on Linux.
TV show on abc tv
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