Congratulations!! :) And a HUGE Thank You for all the great software
you've already released and that you continue to do so ;)

Cheers,
C

On May 27, 8:17 pm, Mark Ramm <[email protected]> wrote:
> The long wait is finally over!
>
> I am happy to announce the release of TurboGears 2.0
> final<http://turbogears.org/2.0> .
> This release is the product of a lot of work by the whole TurboGears team,
> and we're very happy to have a final stable release. TurboGears 2.0 final
> includes all kinds of goodies for those making web applications, from one of
> the most powerful and flexible Object Relational Mappers available in any
> language, to a powerful and flexible template system.
>
> But just as important as the quality of the parts, is the out-of-the-box
> integration to help get you started quickly:
>
>    - We have quickstart template that helps get you going quickly with
>    everything you need: from sample templates, to sample controllers and 
> tests.
>    - We have an extensible user/groups/permission system that you can easily
>    configure into your app when quickstarting a project.
>    - We have zero config needed support for development database backed by
>    SQLite
>    - We have a working admin system for editing your database while your app
>    is in development
>    - Our admin system is extensible and reusable as a component of your
>    application
>
> There's lots more. But we also don't think that out of the box defaults
> should become constraints on our users.  TurboGears 2 is designe to get you
> started quickly and get out of your way when you know what you want.  So, a
> trivial configuration change lets you use DB2, or Oracle, or SQLServer, and
> everything we've wired up for you is easy enough to customize or replace.
> For example, we support configs for three major python template engines out
> of the box, and you can easily make your own render function to handle
> anything else you want.
>
> One of the goals of TurboGears 2 <http://turbogears.org/2.0>  is to use
> standard python components, that are valuable in all kinds of other
> contexts, so you are not tied into one monolythic system. Learning
> SQLAlchemy can help you write command line tools, GUI apps, web-services
> that don't use a framework; Genshi is valuable when generating all kinds of
> xml data for interchange between systems; the beaker is a great caching
> system that's valuable in all kind of web contexts, etc.
>
> TurboGears 2 <http://turbogears.org/2.0> final is just now comming out, but
> it's already in production use at places like ShootQ, RedHat (for a large
> set of Fedora infrastructure projects) and many other places. And we're
> already looking forward to a few more high profile TG2 deployments in the
> next few weeks.
> --
> Mark Ramm-Christensen
> email: mark at compoundthinking dot com
> blog:www.compoundthinking.com/blog
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