I’m experimenting with this now…running the Windows LnF in SQL Developer v4.1 to see if it’s actually more performant. With the native LnF, the operating system is in charge of how to draw the Windows and render certain elements and controls. However, it’s a little bit more expensive to run over the native LnFs. The Oracle LnF is the default, and I also think it looks the best, especially on Windows. “Look” refers to the appearance of GUI widgets (more formally, JComponents) and “feel” refers to the way the widgets behave. The architecture of Swing is designed so that you may change the “look and feel” (L&F) of your application’s GUI (see A Swing Architecture Overview). We support a native operating system ‘ look and feel‘ and also ship with an Oracle look and feel (LnF). SQL Developer is a Java Swing desktop application – surprise!
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