The best advice I could give you under the circumstances you mentioned
(time constraints), is to not use Cake (initially).

Get the project out using whatever methods you usually employ.

Once its out and you have some breathing space, you could use it as a
learning project and re-write it using the Cake framework.

Cake's learning curve is (initially) quite steep and you will have
enough to worry about hitting your deadlines without having to learn a
whole framework.

Use Cake for your next project :-)

On Jan 22, 10:18 am, Oxygen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wow, I wasn't expecting this many replies!
>
> Thanks guys!
>
> To give you a little more background, I've just changed from Java
> Swing development to PHP. The first thing I had to do in PHP was set
> up Eclipse and get proper debugging working (I'm planning to look at
> Komodo and the rest soon). Stepping through code watching variables
> change, including SQL queries get constructed, was extremely useful.
>
> The problem is that I'm doing this professionally, and under serious
> time constraints. If I were at home I'd be playing around to my
> heart's content with whatever I fancied doing, in this case I need to
> get something done for a customer in a couple of weeks.
>
> Thanks again,
> Ben
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