On the downside though, CodeIgniter doesn't really DO much for you either, which is in stark contrast to Catalyst Plugins. But I agree. It is the least offensive, most Catalyst like PHP framework I've found.

Russell Jurney
[email protected]



On Feb 10, 2009, at 4:09 PM, Scott McWhirter wrote:

On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 12:59, Julien Gervais-Bird <[email protected]> wrote:
So, I'm thinking there's no better place, than Catalist, to ask about a
good PHP framework, that will make sense to a Catalyster.

I'm in a similiar situation. I initially attempted to use CakePHP. After having wasted too much time with Cake, I switched to Symfony. I'm still in the process of learning it (I'm working on their Jobeet tutorial) but I
already have a much better feeling about it.

For example, with Cake, I was struggling simply to get the user interface language in urls. With Symfony, I just have to follow lesson 19 of their
Jobeet tutorial.

I've been using CodeIgniter recently and it was pretty reasonable.
It's more like catalyst in terms of "providing a structure for
organizing your code", but it doesn't really enforce anything specific
upon you.

As far as MVC frameworks go, I didn't mind it too much.

ta!


--
-Scott McWhirter- | -konobi-

_______________________________________________
List: [email protected]
Listinfo: http://lists.scsys.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/catalyst
Searchable archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Dev site: http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/



_______________________________________________
List: [email protected]
Listinfo: http://lists.scsys.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/catalyst
Searchable archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Dev site: http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/

Reply via email to