First off, let me say that I love Trac.  It's been a huge help to my 
development group.  However, I'm not sure I would want to make the 
argument of Trac over Roundup.  I've been a big fan of Roundup since way 
back, and I would love to see it get the kind of momentum that you mention 
Trac having.  Roundup has always had some great ideas and I think it has 
some powerful features that would be really useful for OSS development.

I think Roundup's strongest points are:
--email notification, especially the nosy list
  I find that Trac's email notification never works quite the way I want 
it to.  Either I turn on the "always_notify_x" switches and get too many 
emails or I turn it off and get too few.  Roundup's nosy list concept is 
simple, intuitive, and very powerful.  I'd love to see it implemented in 
Trac.
--generic object model
  Roundup's flexibility in creating new object types with states and 
interlinking is very nice.  I've seen the Trac Object Model Proposal and 
it looks like an attempt to implement a similar idea for Trac, which would 
be great. http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/wiki/TracObjectModelProposal
--Easy setup
  While this wouldn't be an issue in this instance, Roundup is no problem 
to install and get running while Trac can be an absolute nightmare with 
all of its dependencies.

Trac's strongest points in comparison to Roundup are:
--Much more polished look-and-feel
  It looks and works great out of the box (assuming you can actually get 
all its dependencies installed).
--Tight integration (subversion, wiki, ticketing)
--Clean plugin model for extension

I think that both are very well designed, but I'd love to see Roundup get 
the kind of attention that Trac has gotten and see where Roundup goes.

Alex Buccino






Chris Ryland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/28/2006 12:43 PM
Please respond to trac
 
        To:     trac@lists.edgewall.com
        cc: 
        Subject:        [Trac] sell Guido on Trac


I'm (privately, via email) trying to sell Guido (Python BDFL) on the 
use of Trac vs. Roundup for future Python development (e.g., Python 
3000).

How would I make the case to him?

The main advantage I would see in Trac is it's excellent Subversion 
integration, which is not really built-in to RoundUp, plus Trac's 
much greater momentum in the OSS worlds.

Cheers!
--Chris Ryland / Em Software, Inc. / www.emsoftware.com


_______________________________________________
Trac mailing list
Trac@lists.edgewall.com
http://lists.edgewall.com/mailman/listinfo/trac



_______________________________________________
Trac mailing list
Trac@lists.edgewall.com
http://lists.edgewall.com/mailman/listinfo/trac

Reply via email to