Hi Gabriel, thanks for answering!

And Thank you very much Jamie! I will follow your suggestions!!! I have
planned to develop some production apps, so I will stick with 1.4.
And learn v2.0 in my free time!!!!!!!

Thanks! Merry Christmas!

2010/12/24 Jamie Hall <jstevenh...@gmail.com>

> Gabriel,
>
> Whilst I agree with your outlook on this, it does not answer his question.
>
> He says he has a month or 2 for studying symfony. He has already made his
> framework of choice.
>
> So, oscar, to answer your question. It would be great to start studying
> Symfony2 and mastering it so you can start developing projects, however, it
> is not in a stable position at the moment for production ready applications.
>
> It is due to be released in April 2010. If you won't be doing any
> production ready projects until then I would highly recommend learning it.
> Once it comes out you've already got a very good idea of how it works and
> can start developing straight away.
>
> However, if you need to start developing production ready apps fairly soon
> then i'd recommend sf 1.4, primarily because it's fully-tested and stable.
> Plus there are a lot of plugins currently available to increase your
> development speed. Plus symfony2 doesn't currently have an admin generator
> like you have in sf 1.4, and as we know, this is an incredibly useful
> feature.
>
> Symfony2 features are not fully finalised yet. They may introduce some new
> syntax (i.e. namespace changes) or re-engineer some of the features so it'll
> be a continual learning process until finalised in April.
>
> I very much enjoy working with sf1.4 however I can already see the benefits
> of symfony2 and I continue to follow it's progress very often.
>
>
> Hope this helps. Have a fantastic Xmas too.
>
> Jamie
>
> p.s. By the way, your English is perfect. :-)
>
>
> On 24 December 2010 21:02, Gabriel Petchesi <pghora...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Instead of focusing on a particular technology my suggestion is to
>> approach this the other way around.
>>
>> Find a real life problem that needs fixing, analyze it and decide what
>> technology to use, learn it and apply what you have learn.
>> It does not really matter what language or framework you use, the
>> important thing is to get down and solve issues for which you get hopefully
>> payed or contribute to a OSS project.
>>
>>     gabriel
>>
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>
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