2008/6/12 Jonathan Slenders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > 2008/6/12 Tim Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > >> On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 01:09:01 +0200, "Jonathan Slenders" < >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> >>> I'm working on a web application framework in Python, and just uploaded >>> the >>> first release. >>> >>> Now I quote from my own README. What it actually does is: >>> >>> - Provide an easy way to embed Python code into HTML, similar to PHP, JPS >>> and other server side languages. >>> - Make reusing HTML very easy. It uses concepts like master pages and >>> including of other pages as a control. This is a very rich template >>> mechanism. >>> ... >>> >>> >> >> May I ask what motivated you to create this from scratch? There are a >> number of excellent Python web application frameworks available today, >> several of which have syntax and functionality almost exactly like yours. >> >> I'm not trying to say you shouldn't do such a thing, but people in the >> world at large already complain there are too many web frameworks for >> Python. I'm just wondering why you didn't choose one of the existing >> frameworks that was close to what you wanted, and become a contributor to >> that. Was there something you thought was fundamentally missing from the >> others? >> > > Dear Tim, > > You should know that I've been working on this project for about a year and > a half. Apart from Django, I didn't know even one framework that I liked > during this development. (Actually, at the start I didn't know about Django, > later on I did and realised it was good but had my reasons not to use it. > I'm not going to discuss it now.) > > All that time it's just been the back-end for my personal web site - I had > never the intend to publish it. But the framework became gradually more and > more extensive and since a half year I realized that it was well designed > and could compete with others. > Some of my best friends are very active Django users, and when I showed my > framework, they also said that it was pretty similar to that. > > If you know that many Python web frameworks, I'd really like to hear about > it. (I've seen several, yes, but some were very outdated and and not > maintained anymore) > Because I don't know much of them it's hard to say what I missed. But what > I wanted was: > > - query parameters should be available as variables, but they shouldn't be > unpacked by default as was in PHP years ago (I want to declare the variables > that should be accepted) > - It *should* work perfectly well without database. (at the start of this > project, my hosting had no database) > - code should be reusable with master pages like ASP.net does > - when a master page is stored in another directory than the url's ("<a > href=...".) should be rewritten in a way so that they are always reusable to > the page from where the are generated > - form input fields should be available as objects. > > Again, I didn't know any framework that does all this. Django needs a > database (not?) and the others which I found were crap, sorry.... > > Jonathan >
OK, I have to take my word back. Django can run without database. But still, it's totally different, it has a custom template language, while I'm actually using Python itself als template language. Pylons -- what I just found -- also seems to have a custom (and thus limited) template language. I think this is unique, isn't it?
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