Development/Tutorials/KDE2: Difference between revisions

From KDE TechBase
(Mark for archiving, keep around for historical and reference purposes)
(KDE4 isn't current :D)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Archive}}
{{Archived}}


Tutorials are the fastest way of finding out what KDE will do for you, and how to do it. Here is a list of currently available tutorials for KDE2 development.  
Tutorials are the fastest way of finding out what KDE will do for you, and how to do it. Here is a list of currently available tutorials for KDE2 development.  


{{tip|If you are working with a newer version of KDE, such as KDE3 or KDE4, these tutorials are probably of limited use to you. For tutorials covering more current KDE development topics, visit the [[Development/Tutorials|main tutorials page]]}}
{{tip|If you are working with a newer version of KDE software, visit the [[Development/Tutorials|main tutorials page]]}}
 


== Getting Started ==
== Getting Started ==

Latest revision as of 14:58, 31 May 2019


This page has been archived
The information on this page is outdated or no longer in use but is kept for historical purposes. Please see the Category:Archives for similar pages.

Tutorials are the fastest way of finding out what KDE will do for you, and how to do it. Here is a list of currently available tutorials for KDE2 development.

Tip
If you are working with a newer version of KDE software, visit the main tutorials page


Getting Started

A KDE tutorial, KHello
A KDE 2 programming tutorial by Daniel Marjamäki. This tutorial introduces the KDE APIs using a graphical version of the world famous 'hello world' program. This document is also available in single download as a gzipped tar file.

General

KDE 2.0 Development
A KDE 2.0 development "book"

Components and Plugins

Kicker

Extending the KDE Panel
This tutorial teaches you how to implement a simple panel applet using the panel applet API. It is a suitable task for an introduction to KDE programming.