Hi guys,
Thanks a million for your helpful replies. I suppose I get your points and
seem to me you all talk along same principle line but focus may be on
different segments. So all suggestions and ideas appear coherent to me.
Initial support requirement should be very basic, e.g. not including
*Hi there,* *I am an application programmer (Java, PHP) and almost new to
web development. I am currently investigating as to what is the most
appropriate/applicable open source platform/framework to develop a web site
(simple to start but more comprehensive into the future) for tourism or
Greetings
I guess given the lack of replies that most think this is too OT for
this list, well I suppose it is but I couldn't resist answering.
Don't Do It
That is, don't use any framework at all.
Download Tomcat and the relevant J2EE API documentation bundle, then
goto the MySQL site and get
I actually agree with Lyallex quite strongly, I found very little value
in *any* of the frameworks out there today, and in fact I'm starting to
believe most of them are counterproductive.
However, that's not to say I think plain servlets and JSPs is the
absolute best answer either... since
From: Lyallex [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Seeking advice as to what platform/framework to
use for developing a tourism/tourist attractions web site
Greetings
I guess given the lack of replies that most think this is too OT for
this list, well I suppose it is but I couldn't
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 2:38 PM, Frank W. Zammetti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I actually agree with Lyallex quite strongly,
..no, you don't, you can't, well actually you do, so I'm not going mad
then, fabulous.
No Idea what DWR is and the idea of writing more of my app in
javascript leaves me a
Peter
Never suggested the OP develop carts and such like from scratch really did I.
What I said was he should focus on learning the core APIs, that's a
little different.
Building your own business logic is a requirement whatever framework
you use (or don't use). If you can tell me where to find
Peter's point is valid though... you could certainly build the site in
PHP for example and just drop in a bunch of pre-existing modules for a
shopping cart, blog, that sort of thing, then just write some basic PHP
pages to tie it all together.
For example, my web host has this Fantastico
Lyallex wrote:
Greetings
I guess given the lack of replies that most think this is too OT for
this list, well I suppose it is but I couldn't resist answering.
Don't Do It
That is, don't use any framework at all.
Download Tomcat and the relevant J2EE API documentation bundle, then
goto the
Peter Crowther wrote:
From: Lyallex [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Seeking advice as to what platform/framework to
use for developing a tourism/tourist attractions web site
Greetings
I guess given the lack of replies that most think this is too OT for
this list, well I suppose it is
From: David kerber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Not using a framework isn't quite the same thing as not using
available packages and libraries.
Entirely true. However, many (though not all) of the existing packages assume
particular frameworks. If anyone wants a glimpse of a possible nightmare
Peter Crowther wrote:
From: David kerber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Not using a framework isn't quite the same thing as not using
available packages and libraries.
Entirely true. However, many (though not all) of the existing packages assume
particular frameworks. If anyone wants a
I agree with others on the list that *for other purposes* starting at
the basics and working up is the way to go. I may have a different
view of what basics is, given that I *think* I still carry around
enough in my head that I could design a functional (if basic) computer
from the discrete
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