"Business Logic" is too broad to give you a good answer. If you mean
stuff like calculating salaries (if your domain is HR) or determining
if a 'monster' is dead (for a game) then django should pose no
obstacle since it is based in python and you should implement all that
logic in your own
Thanks all.
DJango-erp looks interesting in and of itself.
Is there an ERP solution open-sourced with DJango that is maintained?
On Thu, Dec 15, 2011 at 1:08 AM, bobhaugen wrote:
> I'm developing quite complex business systems in Django, and if you
> google for "django
I'm developing quite complex business systems in Django, and if you
google for "django erp" you'll find a bunch of those.
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I'd echo this. In my experience, the code to implement business logic
is far, far less complex than that required to implement databases,
web servers, email systems etc. etc. The skill required here is a mix
of understanding of user/business requirements and coding ability.
The best tool in the
In my experience the only thing that locks you in Django is
not realizing it's just Python and it's just programming.
Use patterns and best practices. Don't think of models as be-all and
end-all business logic. Plan wisely and you'll be good.
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