> If you're just learning Symfony, then yes of course you'll find it too
> much effort. This is true with any other framework/technology.

I am not sure if that is true with every framework. CodeIgniter is
lighter than Symfony. You could argue that maybe it does less, but it
also seems to take less to get going. Of the PHP developers I know,
they seem split between CodeIgniter and Symfony. Symfony offers OOP
and a careful adherence to many good design patterns, but CodeIgniter
offers simplicity.

Personally, I am a big fan of Symfony, but I've got some friends who
make many good points in favor of CodeIgniter. And the form system of
Symfony offers a lot of complexity, much of it seemingly unnecessary.




On Sep 18, 10:24 am, Sid Bachtiar <[email protected]> wrote:
> > It is necessary to invest so much effort to do a relatively simple
> > application.
>
> If you're just learning Symfony, then yes of course you'll find it too
> much effort. This is true with any other framework/technology.
>
> But for those of us who have invested our time in Symfony, we find
> great leverage in using Symfony.
>
> So what is the relatively simple application you're trying to build?
>
> On Sat, Sep 19, 2009 at 1:58 AM, bghost <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > It is necessary to invest so much effort to do a relatively simple
> > application.
> > Productivity and profitability of such work is very questionable.
>
> > So, Symfony - Goodbye
>
> --
> Blue Horn Ltd - System Developmenthttp://bluehorn.co.nz
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