Benjamin, I would have loved to attend to hear your update on couchapping > On 11. sep. 2015, at 06.20, Benjamin Young <[email protected]> wrote:
> Upholstering Apache CouchDB - Benjamin Young, The Hypothesis Project > - http://sched.co/400m <http://sched.co/400m> > In this tutorial we'll take a look at various tools for building, > integrating, and deploying CouchApps. We'll take a deep dive into building a > CouchApp: both the thought process and the code. Near the end, we'll throw a > replication party--moving the app between attendee devices sharing the app > and it's accumulated data. A tool for building couchapps that I hope you will include: http://ddoc.me/ <http://ddoc.me/> Here's my plug for ermouth's PouchDB based Ddoc Lab: It is in a class of its own, and includes a curated jQuery plugin set through his manifest concept (jQuery.my) for writing web app w 2-way data binding (totally lost my interest for React after seeing this). Ddoc Lab is a stack of problems solved in a easy to use tool that will cut the learning curve of new HTML5 developers with 1-3 years. I have been working with ermouth for tweeks on this and his other app in the same family "Inliner", a Medium-style content tool with some very cool plugin features and offline by PouchDB. Ddoc Lab also removes the need for small teams to use Github and build tools, a real benefit when getting junior developers up to speed. I bet this tool hasn't been intro'd on a conference yet, and I believe it has the potential of opening up the CouchDB universe to a whole new class of junior developers. There is no limit to what you can to with this tiny IDE, but the beauty is its UX. It allows you to modularize your code beautifully. You'll find a comparison table at http://ddoc.me/ <http://ddoc.me/> covering Python Couchapp/CouchDB Bootstrap/Erica Johs
