A bit harsh, but tentatively agree. It's a really great way to get  
into it.

Once you'll see how easy it is to do dynamic/ajaxified pages with  
Rails, you'll start to get more curious about what goes on "under the  
hood".
Of course, the real power of Prototype will only then start to  
unfold... :)

Best,
Thomas

Am 13.02.2007 um 19:29 schrieb Phlip:

> You seem to be missing "Rails" in that mix. One should never code JS
> directly if one can use a unified and flexible platform that runs it
> for you. Learn Rails, and your websites will be completely dynamic
> before you know it. And you can then view the generated source, and
> learn how Rails put the effects together, to learn Prototype.
>
> Ruby on Rails is the path of least resistance here...


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