On Feb 26, 2007, at 11:00 AM, Eric Crawford wrote:

We recently hired someone to design our "look and feel" for our ofbiz
based ecommerce site.  They were hired to design the ecommerce site
using XHTML and CSS for layout, complying with web standards and
integrate the changes into the OOTB ofbiz ecommerce code. I am hoping
that someone can tell me if they feel that these are fair arguments
for increasing the originally quoted price, as the original price was
quoted with no knowledge of ofbiz or the technologies used on their
part. Following are some comments that they made about the
design/coding of the out of the box ofbiz ecommerce user interface:

* coding is a lot messier than the documents claim
* every component has a variable from headline image to tagline
comments and some variables code for a line and some code for 30 lines
* chaotic coding mess and the time and effort involved trying to clean
up OFBiz in an XHTML and Variable standpoint

Unfortunately, my experience is in the development of back-end systems
and therefore, I am not very familiar with programming for web-based
front ends so I feel like I could use the opinions of the community to
help me determine whether or not these are fair statements.

Any feedback is appreciated,
Eric

I'm not totally sure I understand your questions, so I'll restate them and then give my answer.

1. Are the standard OFBiz ecommerce templates complicated because of the feature richness of the pachage? Yes.

2. Is it a good idea to quote a price for work that you don't understand well and have never done before? No.

3. Is coding public facing applications different than internal applications, ie do the patterns and requirements differ? Yes.

4. Do you have to use all of the variables and every OOTB template in your final design? No, and generally people do not.

-David

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