I think such hybridization is not really possible. The frameworks are
not developed to be compatible to each other...

If they turn out to be will be accidentaly, not intentionally.

I might be light now, but I think CakePHP user base and community is
bigger than Zend's. Zend has the only advantage to know PHP to its
core, and drive its development to whatever direction they choose.


On Dec 17, 8:52 am, RichardAtHome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Another spin on the subject:
>
> CakePHP can easily use the zend framework classes. So why not use
> both?
>
> From what I hear of Zend, its more a set of libraries than a
> 'framework'.
>
> On Dec 17, 4:59 am, Action <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I've always used Cake as my primary framework, but the Zend Framework
> > seems to be shaping up nicely. Most of its published criticisms have
> > been dealt with since 1.0 and it has some very impressive features
> > (webservices, etc.).
>
> > Given the fact that it's "Zend" and that there's an entire team of
> > professional developers behind it, do you think this framework will
> > become the industry standard for PHP? Also, do you think other
> > frameworks such as CakePHP will die off as a result?
>
> > The reason I ask is because I question Cake's future. I've already
> > spent a lot of time on this framework, but I don't want to waste time
> > if something like Zend is going to become the standard. Cake's
> > releases are far more infrequent than Zend's and Cake's documentation
> > is STILL horrible.
>
> > What do you think?- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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