On 2/25/2015 6:27 AM, Tom Evans wrote:
On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 11:30 PM, Benj <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi,
i'm going to invest lots of time and energy in various web projects (mostly
community web sites), and want to pick up a language / framework and invest
heavily on it.
I've spent a lot of time evaluating the various options, and narrowed my
choice to 2 stacks: C sharp asp.net  MVC or Python / Django.

I'm more attracted to Python / Django combo, because of the Python language,
and high level framework Django. I really want to use these.
My only concern is speed. I read that Python can't run concurrent tasks, is
this true ? So a multi-processor with hyperthreads won't benefit the stack
and even slow it down ?
I have no clue how this translates in reality, but should I expect noticable
performance difference on a same server, shall I use Python / Django than if
I had C Sharp Asp.net ?
I don't want to invest lots of time and efforts only to discover in the end
that the site is slow.
You that have real world experiences with running sites, what are your
conclusions ?


I expect sites to be medium traffic: could be handled by a good dedicated
server or average cloud ressources.

Benj
Unless you are producing web-scale sites (gmail, ebay, instagram), the
speed of your website will depend more upon what you do with a
framework than the framework you choose.

If you are producing web-scale sites, then whatever framework you
choose you will need to make the right design decisions and/or
compromises.

Even with the best framework in the world, if you design the
architecture of a website poorly, the website will be slow.

Even less important than the choice of framework is the choice of
hosting container for your framework. If you ever get to the point
where the speed of your wsgi container is the thing that is holding
you back, well done, now you should spend some time looking at it.
Until then, use the way that is easiest for you.

Cheers

Tom

I recently came across a recent article addressing many of common myths about Python. I recommend giving it a read: https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/

As Tom says, it's mostly a matter of how you use the language. You can write slow assembly and you can write fast Python. There are certain areas where writing code in another language will yield significant performance advantages, but for that most part, much of what you'd want to do has already been efficiently implemented in C and made available in Python. E.g., numpy (actually some of this is Fortran, too), scipy, Pillow (for image processing), et. al.

My general thought is that if it works for Instagram (any many other high-traffic services), it'll probably work for whatever I'm doing.

_Nik

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