That sounds good. And yes, the sandbox already demonstrates the bundle
concept, and how a project could be layed down. I'm already playing
around with it ;o)

I know it's to early to ask questions, but maybe this is easy to
explain: what is the purpose of the token in the Symfony 2 debug bar?
To identify different requests (ajax etc.)?

Michael


On 19 Feb., 20:36, Fabien Potencier <fabien.potenc...@symfony-
project.com> wrote:
> Of course we will have a default directory structure, and sensible
> defaults for configuration. Actually, this is already the case if you
> have a look at the sandbox.
>
> Flexibility does not mean that you have to use it. For most people, the
> default will just work for them. But it's great to know that if you need
> to customize something, that's just possible.
>
> Fabien
>
> --
> Fabien Potencier
> Sensio CEO - symfony lead developer
> sensiolabs.com | symfony-project.org | fabien.potencier.org
> Tél: +33 1 40 99 80 80
>
> On 2/19/10 3:42 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
>
> > Very very very impressive Symfony 2 ... !
>
> > I watched parts of the conference (thanks to Ben Haines), i read the
> > blogs, i watched the slides, i tried the sandbox ... really, very
> > impressive.
>
> > I also watched the presentation from Fabien himself (http://
> >www.slideshare.net/fabpot/symfony-20-revealed) and read features like
> > "Extremely Configurable", "Name your configuration files the way you
> > want", "Store them where you want", "Inherit them as much as you want"
> > or "Mix and match configuration files written in any format" etc.
>
> > This sounds really nice. But even though it's possible, IMO Symfony
> > should force us to use, or at least recommend us (the developers) some
> > sort of structure for our projects. What i really like about symfony
> > 1.x is it's common project structure. I mean, you always know where to
> > setup the database, where the models are, wehre to edit the actions
> > etc. Even if you have to start working on an already existing project,
> > you know where you are. And i think this is a very important Symfony
> > feature for bigger (enterprise) projects.
>
> > So the new possibilities are for sure great and endless, but i hope
> > Symfony 2 will have it's own standard "project development pattern",
> > like symfony 1.x ...
>
> > Can't await end of 2010 ;o)
>
> > Michael

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