org.symbian.tools.wrttools.doc.WRTKit/html/WRTKit_Tutorials-GUID-506c11e3-e6f3-43ec-9495-fcfa638b7e08.html
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html lang="en" xml:lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="Content-Type" />
+<meta name="copyright" content="(C) Copyright 2005" />
+<meta name="DC.rights.owner" content="(C) Copyright 2005" />
+<meta content="concept" name="DC.Type" />
+<meta name="DC.Title" content="WRTKit Tutorials" />
+<meta scheme="URI" name="DC.Relation" content="WRTKit_Hello_World_Tutorial-GUID-67e0a561-48ac-4938-8f1b-852422b71380.html" />
+<meta scheme="URI" name="DC.Relation" content="WRTKit_RSS_Reader_Tutorial-GUID-678d197f-c7b0-4e5e-85e2-f8549c75bbe8.html" />
+<meta scheme="URI" name="DC.Relation" content="WRTKit_Travel_Companion_Tutorial-GUID-be79ba64-fa03-4968-964e-d7dcc42d7053.html" />
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+<meta content="en" name="DC.Language" />
+<link href="commonltr.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" />
+<title>
+WRTKit Tutorials</title>
+</head>
+<body id="GUID-506C11E3-E6F3-43EC-9495-FCFA638B7E08"><a name="GUID-506C11E3-E6F3-43EC-9495-FCFA638B7E08"><!-- --></a>
+
+
+
+    <h1 class="topictitle1">
+WRTKit Tutorials</h1>
+
+    <div>
+
+        <p>
+
+            The WRTKit tutorials guide you through the process of using the WRTKit user
+            interface toolkit to build widgets. Even if you're familiar with widget
+            development or a veteran HTML, CSS and JavaSCript developer, these tutorials
+            will probably be useful to you as they focus on using the WRTKit to create
+            and manage the user interface.
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            There are three tutorials all in all and in each one we will take a look at one
+            of the examples that are included with the WRTKit SDK.
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            The first one is a gentle start where we will create the classic "Hello World"
+            application but using the WRTKit for the user interface. This is a good starting
+            point because it covers the basics of using the WRTKit, how to organize files,
+            how to initialize the user interface toolkit, and such topics.
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            The next tutorial is an actual useful widget: an RSS Reader. As with all WRTKit
+            tutorials we will focus on the user interface portion of this widget, but you
+            will also learn how to integrate a WRTKit -based user interface with data that
+            has been pulled in using AJAX. Feel free to use this example widget as a basis
+            for your own RSS Reader.
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            In the third tutorial we'll create create a widget called "Travel Companion"
+            in order to learn how to use the WRTKit to build complex widgets with multiple
+            views, showing complex custom content, using timers to automatically update
+            views in the background, as well as how to separate the user interface code from
+            the back-end logic code and data. Since the tutorial is about how to use the
+            WRTKit we will not actually create any real back-end logic but rather use a
+            mock back-end that will give us data that looks real but is actually hard-coded.
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            If you want you can complete the widget to make it work against actual data
+            sources on the Internet. Since the user interface is entirely separated from
+            the back-end logic you should be able to do this without touching any of the
+            user interface code!
+        </p>
+
+        <p>
+
+            When you go through the tutorials it could be a good idea to have your code
+            editor open so that you can inspect the example widget code as you read about
+            it. We will be talking a lot about the various classes and methods in the WRTKit
+            so having the
+            <a href="WRTKit_API_Reference-GUID-00e47c27-0a1a-443f-ae85-cf3381635170.html">
+WRTKit API Reference</a>
+            open is probably also a good idea.
+        </p>
+
+    </div>
+
+<div>
+<ul class="ullinks">
+<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="WRTKit_Hello_World_Tutorial-GUID-67e0a561-48ac-4938-8f1b-852422b71380.html">Hello World</a></strong><br />
+</li>
+<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="WRTKit_RSS_Reader_Tutorial-GUID-678d197f-c7b0-4e5e-85e2-f8549c75bbe8.html">RSS Reader</a></strong><br />
+</li>
+<li class="ulchildlink"><strong><a href="WRTKit_Travel_Companion_Tutorial-GUID-be79ba64-fa03-4968-964e-d7dcc42d7053.html">Travel Companion</a></strong><br />
+</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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