Great book to get you started is "Rapid Web Applications with Turbo
Gears" by Ramm-Dangoor-Sayfan. It should get you going very quickly
without the lost in the details worries of the various parts of the
stack. It appears to be a little dated (as most printed material is in
the OSS world), but very worthwhile.

On Aug 17, 11:25 pm, Mike Lewis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Iain and Mark,
>
> Thanks for the quick replies.  I think i am going to go with Iain's
> approach for now until I get the hang of TG, (but using Genshi and
> SA).  I'll have to investigate Mako in the future.  I love the idea
> how TG is glue, and if a certain component is a bottleneck you can try
> a different one or write your own without a complete rewrite of your
> M, V, and C.  In an entirely new fram I'd really like to start off
> with TG2, but I wouldn't be able to look at many tutorials and I'd be
> completely lost (unless somebody can point me to one).
>
> A lot of times I just have a tough time getting bootstrapped and start
> getting actual work done because I have the bad habit of caring more
> about the tools I am using than actually making a product, and I think
> not jumping directly into TG2 will be advantageous for that.
>
> Thanks again,
> Mike


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