Hi !

@Bugsbane : I might have misread your email but it seems like you forgot to 
mention *why* you "would not have a chance of creating anything useful if [you] 
had to work with straight PHP".
Can you be more precise ? :)

Again, I personnaly don't see any difference, designers who don't understand 
PHP just have to ignore everything that's between <?php ?> tags. By the way, 
the PHP code in the view file should be really easy to understand since it 
should only be basic "if else", "foreach" and "echo" statements, nothing really 
hard to figure out.

I think we need more opinions !

Best regards,

-- 
François



----- Mail Original -----
De: "Bugs Bane" <[email protected]>
À: "owncloud" <[email protected]>
Envoyé: Samedi 13 Novembre 2010 02h10:17 GMT +01:00 Amsterdam / Berlin / Berne 
/ Rome / Stockholm / Vienne
Objet: [Owncloud] Re: Templating engine or not?


Speaking as a designer, 

I've created the visual design for various projects using Joomla (mainly), 
Drupal and Magento. The ease of the template system plays a very large part in 
my decision of which CMS I am going to use for a project and I would not have a 
chance of creating anything useful if I had to work with straight PHP. For 
these reasons I *love* Joomla and despise Magento. Why? Because in Joomla the 
vast majority of any template is just html in the index.php file and css in the 
template.css file. Any PHP that does exist in there is typically one short, 
standard code snippet to include a module (similar to blocks in Drupal). I 
don't really need to know any code beyond 1 or two snippets and CSS. Compare 
this to the nightmare that is Magento where code is flung around multiple files 
in multiple locations and you need to know what just about all of them do to 
estimate why something looks the way it does and how to change it. Drupal is 
somewhere in the middle, albeit much better than Magento. Strangely enough, 
over 90% of websites (including http://krita.org ) that I've been in charge of 
creating use Joomla. 

Now I don't know if what's in Joomla a coder would call a "templating engine" 
or not. I don't really know what's meant by the phrase. What I know is that 
HTML, CSS, Gimp and Inkscape are familiar and need no introduction. Every other 
file and protocol that's introduced is other specialty learning I'd have to 
study before helping out (ie a barrier to entry). 

Cheers 

Bugsbane / Kubuntiac 


On Tue, Nov 9, 2010 at 6:21 AM, François K. < [email protected] > wrote: 


Hi, 

As I said yesterday on IRC, I'm strongly pro separating views and treatments as 
far as we can. But I'm also strongly against templating systems. Here is why : 

- PHP is a templating system. Includes and the alternative syntax are made for 
that ( http://php.net/manual/en/control-structures.alternative-syntax.php ). As 
a consequence, most templating systems are just re-inventing the wheel : PHP 
works already well and has no limitations. 
- It forces us to learn a new language. 
- I don't think they make things easier for webdesigners (just look at some 
template code, it's the same). 
- I also think that webdesigners have to have a basic knowledge of PHP to do a 
proper work :P 
- It adds a strong dependency. What if the templating system we chose isn't 
maintained anymore (that could be in 2 or 3 years, who knows) ? 
- It may decrease performances (this is arguable). 

I used to build my websites with a templating system and, I now see that the 
gain is null. 

However, just like Frank, if a majority of people wants it, just go on with the 
chosen one :) 

Cheers, 

-- 
François 





----- Mail Original ----- 
De: "Frank Karlitschek" < [email protected] > 
À: [email protected] 
Cc: "owncloud" < [email protected] > 
Envoyé: Mardi 9 Novembre 2010 11h54:02 GMT +01:00 Amsterdam / Berlin / Berne / 
Rome / Stockholm / Vienne 
Objet: [Owncloud] Re: Templating engine or not? 




Hi, 


I´m personally not a big fan of templating engines in PHP for stuff beside 
static webpages like corporate websites. 

Sometimes they are not powerful enough and limit the functionality of the 
frontend. 
Or they are powerful and are something like a programming language inside a 
programming language. 
Which is a bit stupid in my opinion because PHP was developed to be exactly 
that. :-) 

And webdesigners also have problems to contribute because they have to learn 
the complex template language. 

So I´m personally not a big fan of this idea but if the majority wants to do 
this please go forward. 


Cheers 
Frank 




On 09.11.2010, at 11:36, [email protected] wrote: 

> Hey, 
> 
> yesterday we had a discussion on irc about templating engine or not. 
> We all agreed we have to seperate views. 
> But how was the question. 
> 
> Lets start with pro for templating: 
> - easier way to seperate application logic and views (think about MVC) 
> - webdesigners could contribute this project 
> - ... 
> 
> and contra: 
> - dependency on 3rd party software 
> - isn't php a template system? 
> - ... 
> 
> We would prefer PHPTAL as a templating engine beacause i have 
> experience with it. 
> 
> What do you think? 
> 
> kinds regards 
> - Simon 



-- 
Frank Karlitschek 
[email protected] 




_______________________________________________ 
Owncloud mailing list 
[email protected] 
https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/owncloud 
_______________________________________________ 
Owncloud mailing list 
[email protected] 
https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/owncloud 


_______________________________________________
Owncloud mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/owncloud
_______________________________________________
Owncloud mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/owncloud

Reply via email to