Hi Jeremy; thanks for your post.

> Jeremy Hylton wrote:

I don't think this is a good idea for several reasons. Let's imagine we could go back in time four years and tell the Ruby community the same thing: Appoint someone to research a popular new way of building web applications and add that to the next release of Ruby.

I'm not proposing that the BDFWFOY do research, or develop a new framework; I think we'd all agree we have enough already ;-). I *do* think that having someone facilitate (and referee) discussion aimed at pulling together a "no third step" combination of existing tools would be more useful than what we're doing right now.


I don't think a large web programming toolkit belongs in the Python
distribution.  If anything, go the other way around and package a
particular version of Python with this web toolkit.

Sure, both models have been successful in the past: PIL and Numeric are examples of "external, but only one" that have worked well.


Perhaps someone who took part in the discussion about what XML tools to include in the core Python distro could chime in with a little history?

I'm also skeptical of a plan that sets out to build the one right way
that everyone will use.

Well, then it's a good thing that's not what I'm asking for, isn't it? ;-) I think there's a place for entry-level (i.e., smaller than Zope) web app frameworks; the current confusion is about as helpful as having eight competing regular expression libraries, or six different "standards" for connecting to databases. Appointing a BDFWFOY is one
way to solve the problem (though admittedly less popular than denying it exists ;-). I'd welcome others...


Thanks,
Greg

p.s. BDFWFOY = Benevolent Dictator For the Web For One Year

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