Re: Webpy vs Django?
wow now i have django running. now i see... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Webpy vs Django?
> i played with webpy a bit and it is easy to get going with. but django > seems like once you have it all up and running it will be easier. > just that the barrier of entry is much higher. I can't comment on webpy, but yes, Django has a bit more of a learning curve in some areas, less in others. > is django worth it? seems so ridicoulusly hard to get it running. i > run into trouble every time i advance a little, firstin the > installationa nd now in the tutorial(creating polls). For a big project, I'd say it's very worth it. The code tends to read easy, the people are friendly, the documentation is good for an open source project, and it's on an upward adoption trend. > what do you think of webpy for big projects that need performance? No clue. Django seems to be tried-and-true in terms of scalability and performance, I haven't had to look further. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Webpy vs Django?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : i have been trying to get Django running for 2 days now and it drives me crazy. i played with webpy a bit and it is easy to get going with. but django seems like once you have it all up and running it will be easier. just that the barrier of entry is much higher. Django is indeed a bit more complex than webpy. is django worth it? seems so ridicoulusly hard to get it running. i run into trouble every time i advance a little, firstin the installationa nd now in the tutorial(creating polls). I'm a bit surprised by your report of having problems running Django. Deploying it on production can be a pain sometimes (well... I don't like sys-admin stuff anyway...), but running Django on the builtin test server with SQLite or MySQL is almost OOTB. what do you think of webpy for big projects that need performance? Nothing. Never tried it. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Webpy vs Django?
On Jun 3, 3:14 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > what do you think of webpy for big projects that need performance? A better question would be: do you need features which are in Django and not in webpy? If webpy suits your needs and you are happy with it, keep it. OTOH, if you need more than webpy, consider a bigger framework (there are many of them, Django is not your only choice). I would expect the performance of all Python framework to be roughly the same, the difference is in the learning curve and in the features, not in the performance. Michele Simionato -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list