On Oct 6, 8:13 am, Bruno Desthuilliers <bruno. [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well... Last year, I had a look at Pylons, then played a bit with wsgi > and building my own framework over it. I finally dropped that code and > went back to Pylons, which I felt could become far better than my own > efforts. Now since then I had way too much to do at work (using other > technos) and didn't find the time to work on my own projects, so I still > don't know how well Pylons will pass the "real world" test, but it seems > to me that it's rapidly progressing and mostly in the right direction. I > still wait for an opportunity to check this out !-)
This would be my general suggestion too. It's fine to write your own, and not that hard, but you'll be missing out on the momentum and help from the community. You'll be maintaining your own code instead of having other people work on maintenance -- which actually isn't that much more work, except that you'll be doing it alone and without that collective experience at hand. That said, going without a framework (which at least in his article is what Michele seems to be comparing Pylons against) isn't always so bad. I started writing an Atompub server in Pylons, but felt like I was spending too much time navigating around what the framework setup and not enough time just paying attention to what Atompub really is. So I ended up writing it (as FlatAtomPub), effectively without a framework (though developing it at the same time as WebOb, so I leaned on that quite a bit). The development went quite well, and for a web service like Atompub that's probably what I'd recommend (at least to experienced developers -- you might find yourself left to drift otherwise without a clear idea of where to start). But for writing a traditional web application, I'd still use Pylons. The choices Pylons have made are with that in mind, and it doesn't at all exclude other forms of development in the process. You could actually drop a FlatAtomPub instance right into a Pylons app, for instance. Pylons is a small enough framework that it really is quite reasonable to pick and choose and use a very minimal style with it. Ian -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list