Personally speaking it's a case of practice, practice, practice. I feel documentation can only get you so far and it won't be a panecea or all your woes, like Sudheer says the best way is to get writing an app. What I found useful was use this list ( or any of ) watch the questions comin through, and compare replies with what you would have said, to the actual solution, if there is one, this is a great way to test and enhance your understanding.

On 25 Nov b 2009, at 18:20, swilhelm <[email protected]> wrote:


I want to second this post. I have used ZF for some projects earlier this year and I am right on the cusp of making a major decision: explore ZF 1.9
more deeply or abandon ZF and PHP altogether for Ruby on Rails.

ZF Documentation seems almost passive aggressive, providing examples to get
started, but lacking enough information to build, test, and deploy
production quality, maintainable websites.

Maybe it's a case of "the grass is always greener on the other side of the
fence" but Ruby and RoR seem to be better suited to quickly and easily
develop production quality websites.

I don't want to start a ZF vs RoR discussion, though that might be
interesting. I would like to hear how others have become proficient in
building production websites using ZF.

- Steve W.


Fozzyuw wrote:

Hi all,

I've been watching and playing with ZF for some time now.  Never very
deeply at any given time and often putting it down for extended periods of
time (version releases).

One thing that keeps happening is that ZF is growing quickly. Which is
good, but it's also hard to keep up.

....


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