/complain.
If you'd like to try it out -- even better.
Please go
http://whiff.sourceforge.net
Or use one of the links in the announcement
below.
Thanks -- Aaron Watters
===
THIS .SIG IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
===
WHIFF -- WSGI/HTTP INTEGRATED FILESYSTEM FRAMES
WHIFF is an infrastructure
services
which could be combined in a natural fashion...
There wasn't anything like that available, so I had
to create it.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1500.whyIsWhiffCool
less is more
and explicit URL routing.
Thanks again, Jim.
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1500.whyIsWhiffCool#Header6
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
===
Everything should be as simple as possible.
But not simpler.
-- Einstein
://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
-- Aaron Watters
===
% if i had a ( for every $ bush spent, how many ('s would i have?
too many ('s.
___
Web-SIG mailing list
Web-SIG@python.org
Web SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/web-sig
Unsubscribe:
http
procedure call
to get itself into developer mode automatically,
with no password required,
unless I add something explicit to prevent it.
Just my 2p. -- Aaron Watters
===
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1200_1400.stdMiddleware
___
Web-SIG
:). This doesn't require changes to WSGI, however,
just appropriate additional layers on top of WSGI which you
can call WSGI++ or give another name -- I don't know which
is better -- ask a marketing person.
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_1400.calc
===
Little
there was never an appropriate Python
based alternative for the kinds of things
people like to do with PHP. This is the vacuum
I'm trying to fill with WHIFF.
-- Aaron Watters
===
less is more
___
Web-SIG mailing list
Web-SIG@python.org
Web SIG: http
The implementation supports large externally stored
trees.
Source for the implementations and demos
are available from the WHIFF mercurial archive
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/cgi-bin/whiffRepo.cgi
Hope you like! -- Aaron Watters
===
keep off the grass
Peter Ustinov's requested gravestone
I second the move, recorded here:
http://listtree.appspot.com/wsgi2/ICvaujouPxb2gfEhDS_aiw
-- Aaron Watters
--- On Thu, 11/26/09, James Y Knight f...@fuhm.net wrote:
From: James Y Knight f...@fuhm.net
Subject: [Web-SIG] Move to bless Graham's WSGI 1.1 as official spec
To: Web SIG web-sig
but it still does what it does
as documented very well.
Frequent releases may actually be a sign of
bugginess and bad design.
If you suspect a project is really dead, maybe you
could try to contact the authors and ask about
what they think.
-- Aaron Watters
===
BTW, I think Release early, release
, please inform).
-- Aaron Watters
http://listtree.appspot.com
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com
===
an apple every 8 hours
will keep 3 doctors away. -- kliban
___
Web-SIG mailing list
Web-SIG@python.org
Web SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/web-sig
and *also*
calls the write()... what is supposed to happen? Yikes. This
may require some careful adjustments to WHIFF. I had run into
this and hacked around it on an ad hoc basis assuming it was
a mistake.
-- Aaron Watters
===
less is more
___
Web-SIG
From: Aaron Watters arw1...@yahoo.com
If an application returns an iterable response and *also*
calls the write()... what is supposed to happen?
After carefully considering all the responses on this issue ;c)
I came up with the following strategy for dealing with calls to
write
--- On Mon, 1/4/10, P.J. Eby p...@telecommunity.com wrote:
From: P.J. Eby p...@telecommunity.com
Subject: Re: [Web-SIG] wsgi write=start_response() and iterable return?
To: Aaron Watters arw1...@yahoo.com, web-sig@python.org
Date: Monday, January 4, 2010, 4:38 PM
At 08:42 AM 1/4/2010 -0800
whiff.entry_point and whiff.template_path etc.
Or maybe I misunderstand something. -- Aaron Watters
--- On Wed, 1/6/10, Gustavo Narea m...@gustavonarea.net wrote:
From: Gustavo Narea m...@gustavonarea.net
Subject: Re: [Web-SIG] wsgiorg.routing_path addition to the
wsgiorg.routing_args
likely work.
playing devil's advocate
-- Aaron Watters
===
% ping elvis
elvis is alive
___
Web-SIG mailing list
Web-SIG@python.org
Web SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/web-sig
Unsubscribe:
http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/web-sig/archive%40mail
helps combine some of the
features of the CGI module with the WSGI interface.
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com/
Hope that helps, -- Aaron Watters
===
% man less
less is more.
--- On Sat, 4/3/10, J.D. Main jdm...@comcast.net wrote:
From: J.D. Main jdm...@comcast.net
Subject: [Web-SIG] IIS
application to other configurations
more easily (in theory) and it's just a tiny bit more high level.
Best regards, -- Aaron Watters
___
Web-SIG mailing list
Web-SIG@python.org
Web SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/web-sig
Unsubscribe:
http
or comments.
-- Aaron Watters
--- On Wed, 4/7/10, Randy Syring rsyr...@inteli-com.com wrote:
From: Randy Syring rsyr...@inteli-com.com
Subject: Re: [Web-SIG] SQLAlchemy Queries HTML Data Grid
To: Aaron Watters arw1...@yahoo.com
Cc: web-sig@python.org
Date: Wednesday, April 7, 2010, 1:37 PM
I'm still in denial regarding Python 3 generally speaking,
but it looks like something important is going on here. Could
someone summarize the main points (intelligible to a Python 2
troglodyte)?
thanks in advance, -- Aaron Watters
===
% man less
less is more
every so often).
Best of luck, -- Aaron Watters
btw: If you have lots of money to spend on this
my former client connotate.com does this sort
of scraping (and I developed some of the code).
--- On Mon, 2/21/11, James Mills prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au wrote:
From: James Mills prolo
21 matches
Mail list logo