--- Michael Montagne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I built my website with webware about a year ago and really loved > getting my feet wet. It's now time to get back into it a bit. But > progress seems to have slowed. Is there still any excitement about > this project? It's a super program.
I suppose many Webware users are in my position. I wanted a soundly architected but minimally intrusive way of exposing Python code (especially complex frameworks that can run in other-than-web contexts) via HTTP. Webware provides that; I don't really have any complaints, so I'm not agitating for change. An environment such as Zope offers a lot of prefabricated functionality that Webware doesn't, but at a heavy cost in intrusiveness. For me, Webware's unintrusiveness delivers long-term maintainability benefits in complex projects that offset the laboriousness of constructing the skeleton. For simple projects, the scales would probably tip the other way. But simple projects have a way of not remaining so as the users incrementally pile on requirements. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance: Get your refund fast by filing online. http://taxes.yahoo.com/filing.html ------------------------------------------------------- The SF.Net email is sponsored by EclipseCon 2004 Premiere Conference on Open Tools Development and Integration See the breadth of Eclipse activity. February 3-5 in Anaheim, CA. http://www.eclipsecon.org/osdn _______________________________________________ Webware-discuss mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/webware-discuss
