It's pretty new though, and it's a bit rough around the edges still. The other issue is that almost every single package/library for pyside6 only supports QtWidgets, not QML. Meaning you wouldn't be able to use tons of libraries that make up the python qt ecosystem (for example, pyqtwidgets or vispy). Not a huge dealbreaker but it's something to keep in mind.
Yep I don't think there's a practical way to use qtwidgets on mobile, so it's not like Qt is treating pyside differently. It's just that the ecosystem doesn't really follow. I wonder if that's different on the c++ side. Is QML more prevalent in the c++ qt ecosystem?
It's pretty new though, and it's a bit rough around the edges still. The other issue is that almost every single package/library for pyside6 only supports QtWidgets, not QML. Meaning you wouldn't be able to use tons of libraries that make up the python qt ecosystem (for example, pyqtwidgets or vispy). Not a huge dealbreaker but it's something to keep in mind.
Yeah, it seems pretty half-baked at the moment. It looks like QML is the intended target for mobile apps on the Qt side.
Yep I don't think there's a practical way to use qtwidgets on mobile, so it's not like Qt is treating pyside differently. It's just that the ecosystem doesn't really follow. I wonder if that's different on the c++ side. Is QML more prevalent in the c++ qt ecosystem?