PGP
Java's jOptionPane from the javax.swing library is a GUI element for, essentially, an option dialogue box.
Python is a scripting language. Which you can use to make games, gui apps, text based apps or anything you want. Python comes "with batteries included" which means that the standard library contains a lot, for many different things.
Almost any computer language can do GUI manipulations if provided by a GUI library. Some can be add-ons because the language itself does not have a direct method of doing GUI drawing, etc.Languages such as C and C++ for example do not have a native GUI interface because they are not tied directly to a machine architecture or to an operating systems platform. However, that is not to say that they cannot do GUI manipulations; it just isn't built into the language, but there are 3rd party add-ons that do the manipulations for you.Other languages, such as C# and Java, have built-in gUI libraries that work the same way regardless of the Operating System they are on. In that way they support GUI operators natively, without the use of an add-on GUI library.
Neither Java nor C++ have a GUI as such -- the GUI is not part of the language specification. But comparing the GUIs for an IDE intended for Java with that of an IDE intended for C++ is hardly going to tell you which is better, since they are intended for completely different purposes. You might as well compare the GUI provided with Adobe PaintShop Pro against the GUI for Microsoft Word for all the good it does.
The graphical user interface (GUI) was conceptualized in the early 1960s, with significant developments occurring at Xerox PARC in the 1970s. The first widely recognized GUI was introduced with the Xerox Alto in 1973. However, it gained mainstream popularity with the release of Apple's Macintosh in 1984, which brought GUI to a broader audience.
Becuase It has GUI. (everything you click on!)
There is no such thing as a "GUI-based operating system." A GUI is just one of many method for interacting with an operating system and using it to accomplish a task. The GUI is in no way related to how an operating system works internally.
Yes and no. Yes, Linux has a GUI. Dozens, in fact, all running on the X Windowing System. No, Linux is not BASED on a GUI. Only Windows really has the concept of an operating system "based" on a GUI. To Linux, the X Windowing System and whatever you run on top of it is just another application.
Andrew O. Hall has written: 'A MATLAB GUI for a Legendre Pseudospectral algorithm for optimal control problems'
Outlook Express, which is part of the Windows Package, is both a graphical user interface(GUI) and text-based user interface(TUI).
i dont klnow
Java's jOptionPane from the javax.swing library is a GUI element for, essentially, an option dialogue box.
stolen
WordStar is a word processing program and not an operating system. The WordStar program is most likely a TUI since it is a text based software vs. GUI which is graphic based.
its either tui or gui
Yes
No, DOS is command based only - not Windows based which is a graphic user interface.