Qt
xtan explores Qt-related workflows where stereo vision, spatial perception, and geometry-aware sensing may support cross-platform application development, interactive visualization tools, and perception-driven user interfaces.
Qt and cross-platform application development
Qt is a widely used framework for building cross-platform desktop, embedded, and mobile applications. It provides tools for graphical user interfaces, visualization systems, real-time interaction, and hardware-integrated software used in robotics, industrial systems, research tools, and engineering applications.
Potential for visualization and perception interfaces
Perception pipelines may combine stereo vision, spatial sensing, and geometry-aware analysis with Qt-based interfaces to build interactive tools for visualization, debugging, and system control. This can support research into robotics dashboards, spatial analysis tools, simulation interfaces, and real-time monitoring systems.
Why xtan can be relevant
xtan focuses on stereo vision, geometry-first perception, and practical spatial systems. Within Qt-related workflows, this may support experimental pipelines that combine spatial sensing, structured scene interpretation, and visualization interfaces to enable more robust perception analysis and interactive development tools.
Important note
xtan is not affiliated with or endorsed by The Qt Company. It does not replace Qt development frameworks or commercial software platforms. Instead, it may serve as an experimental perception layer for research, prototyping, and geometry-aware visualization workflows.