+1
On Jul 17, 10:32 am, "Hans Donner" <[email protected]> wrote:
> i m seeing many posts about the doc needing improvement, and some discusions
> about it should be done in the wiki that is not there yet.
> However, i see little that people offer documentation or patches that work on
> the documentation.
>
> please, can we see more of the latter and less of the first? also, do no
> point only to massimo that he should provide it.
> document what is not clear to you, and after help from this list, complete
> it and submit it so it can be added to the documentation or examples.
>
> hans
>
> ------- Original Message -------
> From: viniciusban <[email protected]>
> To: web2py Web Framework <[email protected]>
> Sent: 17/07/2009, 15:57:14
> Subject: [web2py:26736] Re: The 80/20 rule
>
> On Jul 16, 11:49 pm, mdipierro <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > We can add more and more features to web2py with the effect that:
> > - web2py grows in complexity to the point that it becomes harder to
> > maintain
> > - web2py gets slower
>
> I think these 2 are not good choices because a good framework must be
> fast and simple. You achieved that already.
>
> I'd choose to improve free documentation. I really find myself
> confused with web2py's documentation.
> I think the free available resources must be improved and we won't see
> many developers until it gets stronger.
>
> > Finally, this community has to do a better job at outreach. You should
> > talk to your friends and blog about web2py. You must talk about the
> > applications you build with it. We do not lack developers. We lack
> > salesmen.
>
> I just started it the day before yesterday, in Brazilian
> Portuguese:http://aprenda-web2py.blogspot.com
> In 2 days it has about 300 views with virtually no sharing.
>
> We have a strong Django community, but we don't have statistics about
> how many are really *working* with it.
>
> I talked to Alvaro Justen about it and we'll write some posts from the
> web2py user's point of view.
>
> It won't be a manual, absolutelly! It'll be a blog with practical
> web2py development emphasis. Maybe a lot of howtos and many principles
> explained.
>
> I started this blog with 2 posts "selling" some nice features about
> web2py.
> The first one, I got from web2py's homepage.
>
> The other one talks about the "backwards compatibility" thread I
> started this week, but translated.
> As I said before, I think this is some of the most important web2py's
> characteristics.
>
> I can see many advantages in web2py and I will write about them in a
> series of posts, emphasizing the time-to-market web2py allows us to
> have.
>
> --
> Vinicius Assef.
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