Why did GNUstep never really take off?
As the GNUstep homepage states, “GNUstep is a cross-platform, object-oriented framework for desktop application development. Based on the OpenStep specification originally created by NeXT (now Apple), GNUstep enables developers to rapidly build sophisticated software by employing a large library of reusable software components.”
Anyone who has used NeXTSTEP, OPENSTEP or Mac OS X knows the inherent power and quality of this API. It was designed extremely well, successfully taking into account OO principles long before other mainstream platforms got around to it. Even now, many years after it originally appeared on the scene, it has very few rivals.
So one would think that GNUstep, an open source implementation of such a framework for Linux, *BSD, Windows and other systems, would be quite popular. But that apparently isn’t what has happened.
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