If you want to stick with PHP, cake is a nice upgrade as compareable "true" PHP5ish frameworks are still very early alpha
On Jan 9, 1:03 am, Miles J <mileswjohn...@gmail.com> wrote: > It took me only 2-4 weeks to really understand the core of CakePHP. If > you have an extra few weeks, then it doesn't hurt to try it out. And > in the end if you don't like it, then you can simple go back to your > basic PHP. > > Personally, I wouldn't think of going to back and not using > frameworks, unless the project really required it. > > On Jan 8, 1:49 pm, "Alan Asher" <a...@asteriskpound.com> wrote: > > > There is definitely a learning curve. I would say about 2 weeks worth of a > > learning curve to go from a skilled oop php developer to understanding the > > ins and outs of cakephp. > > > If you've been working on the same project for 6 years, there's a good > > chance you have a lot of custom solutions to small problems. And you're not > > going to want to lose a lot of that work. If you've got all that logic in > > objects then it should be relatively simple to include them as vendor > > libraries. > > > So the biggest question to ask yourself is why are you looking to change > > anything at all? Well my imagination says that you didn't build the site > > with MVC in mind at all, and so you're looking for that level of > > manageability. If your project has lasted 6 years, then your code is stable > > enough to do a framework change. You can run in parallel with some test > > users and make sure it's good before rolling live. > > > Cakephp is not a new language to learn... just a new style. MVC and clean > > code is always desired when dealing with scalable projects. > > > Alan > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: cake-php@googlegroups.com [mailto:cake-...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf > > > Of stinsoninc > > Sent: Friday, January 08, 2010 10:50 AM > > To: CakePHP > > Subject: Should I make the leap from PHP coder to cakePHP coder? > > > I've been coding straight PHP for about 6 years now at a small company > > that is not an "early adopter". I've looked into the PHP frameworks a > > bit and I keep going back to a fundamental question for me: > > > Is the cost of learning essentially a new language and converting (or > > probably re-writing) legacy code worth the benefits of a framework? > > Where is the break-even point? 1 month? 1 year? Never, it's just > > good form and the right thing to do? > > > I'm looking to make a presentation to my boss on the subject and am > > interested in the ROI bullet points. If anyone can point me to a page > > (I've looked, but can't find) or chime-in with your thoughts, I would > > really appreciate it! > > > All the best
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