Mockups2Android is the missing link between UX design and development. You’ve created the perfect Android UX using Balsamiq Mockups but before spending the time and money having a developer produce it, you want to try it out in front of the client. Showing them using a laptop or pieces of paper just isn’t working. Mockups2Android will.
Mockups2Android (m2a) is an Android application that reads your Balsamiq Mockup files and creates your UX on the phone or tablet, using real Android controls and using the real data you entered. Imagine being able to let your client actually try out your design on a phone, letting them navigate through screens, enter text, scroll through lists, interact with maps and much more. With m2a it’s all possible. If you want to move a button or introduce a whole new screen into the flow, you can do it in seconds by making the changes in Mockups and m2a will do the rest. No code, no time, just the perfect prototyping tool. All screen sizes are supported.
Software development tool designed for computer users to give them the ability to create any software they need without previous knowledge of computer programming where the user will start to learn how to program and will understand the programming concepts using this tool step by step and without the need to write code by hand at all where the programming done through general purpose visual programming languages. Unlike other visual programming languages, PWCT is not limited and target also professional and mainstream programmers by giving them more productivity than traditional text-based programming languages. Programming Without Coding Technology is a Free-Open Source Visual Programming Languages Framework to create new General Purpose Visual Programming Languages (VPLs) that are a practical alternative to Text based Programming Languages (TPLs). PWCT comes with four general purpose visual programming languages (HarbourPWCT, PythonPWCT, C#PWCT, and SupernovaPWCT).
Eclipse Icon Archive Tool
The Eclipse Icon Archive Tool allows an Eclipse user to browse and export icons from the Eclipse Project. Download the plug-in and place it into the Eclipse plug-in directory. The plug-in and documentation is available on the download page.
Swirrel is a little framework (in alpha state) which allows to annotate AWT or Swing Components instead of writing listeners. Swirrel reads the annotations and attaches the aproriate listeners automatically. All you have to do is to provide the name of the methods which should be called by the Swirrel listener.
Swirrel is a double edged sword, it can make things much easier, but you can shoot yourself in the foot (hey, a sword you can shoot with!). Please consider carefully if Swirrel is right for you and your project, especially if it contains deeply nested, complex, dynamic and/or time critical GUIs. Note that using Swirrel requires more testing, as things that caused compile time errors before cause runtime errors now. That said I must say Swirrel runs much smoother than I expected.