It is not a problem in Jython land. Use JPublish as web framework. Next any decent web framework such as Tapestry or Webwork allow to create controller in Jython. The only thing which Jython is missing is continuations to compete Javascript in Cocoon. It seems the continuations is the next big thing in Web Development. About persistence. Hibernate is good. Hibernate 3.0 supports dynamic components as Map. So user can access hierarchy of tables as Map of Map. It would be nice to add support to saving Python objects and add ZODB style adapter in order to run Plone on Weblogic.
Thx, Ilia --- Ian Bicking <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Benjamin Scherrey wrote: > > Anyone checked out the 'Ruby with Rails' ( > http://www.rubyonrails.com > > ) project? I've not yet played around with it but > their mechanism of > > definging a seemingly seemless object-relational > mapping (the Active > > Record aspect of the project) from within the > language is really > > promising. From what I've seen, their use of > reflection to implement > > this doesn't seem outside of good python > programming practice and, I > > believe, python should be fully capable of > supporting a similar > > construct without modifying the existing language. > > Someone's working on it: > http://subway.python-hosting.com/ > > SQLObject, which is what Subway is using, is fairly > similar to > ActiveRecord. This is what you do to create a class > with attributes > read from the database: > > from sqlobject import SQLObject > class MyTable(SQLObject): > _connection = 'mysql://user:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/dbname' > _fromDatabase = True > > -- > Ian Bicking / [EMAIL PROTECTED] / > http://blog.ianbicking.org > _______________________________________________ > DB-SIG maillist - [email protected] > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/db-sig > _______________________________________________ DB-SIG maillist - [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/db-sig
