In my experience, and what I have seen from following the threads, the norm 
is for questions to be answered very well and very quickly. One of the many 
pleasures of using Web2py is the responsiveness of the users group. There 
might be the odd exception to this, but this is unusual I believe. So sorry 
if you had a bad exprience Daniele, but I do not think most users find this.
Peter


On Thursday, 29 November 2012 01:14:52 UTC, Daniele wrote:
>
> I really believe web2py will indeed become the "rails for python" as 
> someone mentioned. Actually, I believe it's much better, easier to use and 
> comprehend, and more pleasant to develop in.
>
> That said, I agree web2py needs to reach a critical mass of users because 
> as of now, it's too hard to get the support to even simple answers, which 
> sometime require days to be answered on google groups. A much wider user 
> base would rapidly solve this problem quite naturally. I think the solution 
> to this would be word of mouth: more users need to use web2py and spread 
> the word of how good it is by mere word of mouth. It's possible, I believe 
> the project can really outshine all the other python web frameworks.
>
> On Tuesday, November 27, 2012 4:39:06 AM UTC, User wrote:
>>
>> I noticed a thread over in web2py-developers web3py - 
>> important!<https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/web2py-developers/RCeiRd3Rzs0>
>>  which 
>> was exciting to read.  I've flirted with web2py and there's a lot that I 
>> like about it.  For some reason I find web2py exciting whereas django 
>> doesn't provide that.  I've used Yii on the php side which is great 
>> framework as far as php goes and asp.net mvc which is great as well.  
>> I'd love to work with python but the main thing making me hesitate with 
>> web2py is critical mass.  
>>  
>> It seems like it wouldn't be hard for web2py to really dominate the 
>> python web framework space if some of the core criticisms were addressed.  
>> I'm not fully up to speed on what they are but I usually hear about unit 
>> testing and global variables.  It feels like there is a roadblock 
>> preventing the project from skyrocketing.  Python needs a rails.  I 
>> understand that the design decisions are by choice with pros and cons.
>>  
>> My questions are:
>> 1. Will web3py likely address these often repeated core criticisms? (I 
>> saw point 5 from the thread linked to above: "5) No more global 
>> environment. Apps will do "from web3py import *" (see below)")
>> 2. The developer thread is over in the developers section.  Will you have 
>> a more open forum for users (as opposed to developers) to have input on 
>> web3py?
>>  
>>  
>>
>

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