Thing is, Qt provides a framework. They have a printer widget, it can print (even if it's bad at it).
KDE wants to provide a productive desktop environment. So they either use a framework that provides what is needed needed, or they extend an existing one. The first part obviously doesn't work.
This is not about adding a constant-time prime factorization algorithm, it's about remembering a bunch of settings. This also isn't about a return of KDEPrint (oh how I miss thee), it's about remembering a bunch of settings.
Thing is, Qt provides a framework. They have a printer widget, it can print (even if it's bad at it).
KDE wants to provide a productive desktop environment. So they either use a framework that provides what is needed needed, or they extend an existing one. The first part obviously doesn't work.
This is not about adding a constant-time prime factorization algorithm, it's about remembering a bunch of settings. This also isn't about a return of KDEPrint (oh how I miss thee), it's about remembering a bunch of settings.