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PUBLIC MARKS with tags python & frameworks

2010

2008

2007

Merging TurboGears and Pylons , Zope

by pvergain
It seems likely that TurboGears and Pylons will merge. This looks like a good thing. ... It’s conceivable, it was definitely discussed a few times as well. It wouldn’t be so much a merger in any sense, as more of a coalescing of common parts. –Ben Bangert (On the Pylons mailing list) So, yes we did spend quite a bit of time talking about this at PyCon. And yes the word merger was used, but if you’re looking for some kind of big bang switchover, I think you’ll be disappointed. From my perspective, the philosophical approach behind all of our discussions has been “The more we can share parts the better.” But we all have taken it one step further — were we have different ideas about how things should be done, we need to weigh the relative merits of maintaining those differences against what those differences cost us. In particular I’m thinking about the cost in terms of mantaining: * separate libraries * separate documentation efforts * separate mailing lists * separate bug tracking systems * decreased visibility in the wider web marketplace * and ultimately separate user communities. .... Surprisingly enough, this is also something we have in common with the Zope guys, who have created a lot of great stuff that none of us got to use because it was too tightly integrated with the Zope core. They have been spinning out components pretty regularly for the last couple of years, and we want to work together with them more. Obviously, we won’t merge with Zope, but I hope that we can work with them in lots of interesting ways to move the state of Python web development forward. I for one would like to have access to their Transaction manager for multi-database transactions, and I worked a bit with Zope guys last week on integrating Tosca Widgets into their Forms system. What I want is for there to be diversity where there are real differences, and unity where those differences don’t matter. We don’t want to limit either framework, but we don’t want to have pointless duplication of effort either. .... Or, if we’re smart enough, creative enough, and and flexible enough, we may end up as one framework. To quote a line from Terminator 2 “The future is not yet set. The future is what we make it.“ ....

Zope/Plone, Ruby on Rails, Turbogears, Django and J2EE.

by pvergain & 2 others
A practical comparison between Zope/Plone, Ruby on Rails, Turbogears, Django and J2EE.

Zope/Plone, Ruby on Rails, Turbogears, Django and J2EE.

by jefferson-beta & 2 others
A practical comparison between Zope/Plone, Ruby on Rails, Turbogears, Django and J2EE.

Dabo Desktop Application Framework

by pvergain
PyCon 2007 was held on February 23-25, 2007, in Addison, Texas. One of the sessions given there was a 45-minute talk entitled Developing Desktop Applications with Dabo, given by Ed Leafe, and filmed by Paul McNett. The video of the session is available here; it has been broken into 6 segments, due to YouTube's limit of 10 minutes per video.

DjangoPoweredSites - Django Code - Trac

by pvergain (via)
Django-powered sites ¶ This page lists sites on the public Web that are powered by Django. WorldOnline is the Web development shop that created Django and open-sourced it. Django was originally extracted from Ellington, a commercially-available content management system for newspapers developed by World Online.

Django | Download

by pvergain
How to get Django Django is available open-source under the BSD license. It requires Python version 2.3 or higher, but it has no dependencies on other Python libraries. There are a couple of ways you can get it: Option 1. Get the latest development version The latest and greatest Django version is the one that's in our Subversion repository (our revision-control system). Get it using this shell command, which requires Subversion: svn co http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk/

2006

The B-List: JavaScript, ORM and "hiding SQL"

by François Hodierne (via)

you’re a web developer and it’s your job to know this stuff, so learn it already

having ORM isn't "hiding SQL"

Twisted Matrix Labs

by xenomorph & 3 others
Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in Python and licensed under the MIT license.Twisted projects variously support TCP, UDP, SSL/TLS, multicast, Unix sockets, a large number of protocols (including HTTP, NNTP, IMAP, SSH, IRC, FTP, and others), and much more.

2005

Django | The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines

by xenomorph & 44 others
Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design.

PyWebOff

by gavrie (via)
PyWebOff is a compare-and-contrast exercise to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of some of the major Python web application frameworks.

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