As we say in French: "Champagne!".

At last, the long-awaited 1.0 stable version of symfony is just 
released. For all those who waited for the "stable" status to dive into 
symfony, the time has come.

Symfony is more mature than ever, faster than ever, and more 
configurable and extendable than ever. A lot of websites 
(href="http://www.symfony-project.com/trac/wiki/ApplicationsDevelopedWithSymfony)
 
officially declare using symfony, and we know of dozens of other 
applications, either Intranet or Internet, running symfony without any 
problem.  The symfony framework is definitely ready to power complex web 
2.0 applications 
(http://www.symfony-project.com/weblog/2006/10/28/yahoo-bookmarks-uses-symfony.html)
 
with a lot of users. It has a tremendous amount of documentation and 
tutorials (http://www.symfony-project.com/content/documentation.html), 
including the just-released Definitive Guide to Symfony 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/1590597869?tag=symfonyprojec-20&camp=14573&creative=327641&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=1590597869&adid=0M478QNY2GTVJXAW8T6G&;),
 
a 490p book published by Apress, written by Fabien and me, and free to 
read online. And you will also find a vibrant community, always ready to 
give you a hand when starting up a symfony application.

The 1.0 is not just another release. We call it an "entreprise" release, 
which means that we will keep on maintaining it for a long time (that 
is, for several years). When a new release of PHP comes with its wagon 
of BC break, we will update symfony 1.0 to make it compatible. When a 
bug is found and corrected in one of the components of symfony 1.0, we 
will update the stable release to make the symfony experience always better.

To install symfony 1.0, head to the book installation chapter 
(http://www.symfony-project.com/book/trunk/03-Running-Symfony) or do a 
checkout from the SVN repository. By the way, if you use 
<code>svn:externals</code> to reference the symfony libraries in your 
project, you might want to switch to the 1.0 branch, which is the 
feature-freeze, stable and maintained version of symfony, recommended 
for production. Newcomers should first give a look at the first project 
tutorial (http://www.symfony-project.com/tutorial/my_first_project.html) 
or at the Ajax screencast, which are good introductions to symfony.

Of course, the development of symfony doesn't stop there. We have tons 
of ideas for improvements and new features, and you can also add your 
own. Extending symfony 1.0 is already very easy thanks to plugins 
(http://www.symfony-project.com/trac/wiki/SymfonyPlugins), which you can 
find and contribute in the symfony wiki.

Now, we need you, humble readers, to make some noise about symfony 1.0. 
If there is one moment to share your experience with symfony in social 
networks, forums or user groups, it is now. If there is a time to praise 
the symfony experience, the ease of development, the quality of code and 
documentation, and the fun, it is now. The more developers will come and 
use symfony, the better the community and the framework will get.

Finally, we would like to thanks you for all the encouragements we've 
received, all the tickets/patches/user documentation that you submitted, 
all the knowledge shared in the mailing list/forum/irc channel, and all 
the flowers you sent us. We are very happy to share this moment with 
you, and we hope that this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

Fabien & François



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