Kent Johnson wrote: > Eric Brunson wrote: > >> Michael Connors wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense >>> to use one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used >>> cherrypy for my first web-based python project and I found it very >>> easy to learn and develop in quickly. >>> >> That's debatable. I find the frameworks to be overly complicated and >> obfuscated. They're great when you're going through the tutorials, but >> try to do something "outside the box" and I find myself digging through >> documentation for longer than it would take me to write it from scratch. >> > > Hmm. As my boss likes to say, "Reasonable people may disagree." I have > been developing with Django for about six months now and I love it. Much > of what I have wanted to do is directly supported and easy in Django; > sometimes I have to push at it but only a few times have I really felt > like I was trying to make it do something it really didn't want to do. I > find both the documentation and code informative and easy to read. >
I'll admit, though I looked at it briefly, Django was not one of the frameworks I spent much time on (didn't care for the templating style). I do most of my web development to run under mod_python and I've developed my own libraries to do what I need to do the way I think it should be done. :-) _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor