Adrian Holovaty wrote:
>
> My suggestion would be to build a quick application with both
> frameworks and use the one that feels more natural to you. Both
> frameworks will let you get the job done, but they have different
> philosophies. TurboGears' philosophy is closer to that of Linux,
> valui
On Sun, 2006-05-11 at 14:27 -0600, Adrian Holovaty wrote:
> On 11/5/06, Matt Culbreth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > So, based on this, my initial leaning had been to go to TurboGears. My
> > thoughts were that the application is not interested in content
> > management or display, and that I'd l
Matt Culbreth wrote:
> Hello Friends,
>
> I'm beginning a new project for a client and I'm going to use either
> Django or TurboGears. I'd like to get some feedback from this group on
> the direction I should take.
>
>
>
>
> So, based on this, my initial leaning had been to go to TurboGears.
On 11/5/06, Matt Culbreth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So, based on this, my initial leaning had been to go to TurboGears. My
> thoughts were that the application is not interested in content
> management or display, and that I'd like to use a bit of AJAX goodies
> here and there.
>
> Any differe
Hello Friends,
I'm beginning a new project for a client and I'm going to use either
Django or TurboGears. I'd like to get some feedback from this group on
the direction I should take.
The facts:
1. The application is basically for a user to respond to surveys.
2. The survey questions are fixe
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