It seems you have missed one important framework: ClojureScript One
So I have choosed to make the *TodoMVC* template (see [0]) application with *ClojureScript One* and *Enfocus*. ( see [1] for running app ) What I could say now, is that CjOne is a little hard to embrace, but when it's done , this is a real pleasure to work with. (I havent used the api functionalities in the sample, *todos* are saved on local repo) The hard part was to integrate *Enfocus*. The whole view is done with Enfocus which rocks ! For those interested in code, see [2]. _______________________________________ [0] http://todomvc.com [1] http://todomvc.herokuapp.com [2] https://github.com/phperret/cjone-todomvc.git Le vendredi 28 septembre 2012 09:36:20 UTC+2, Yakovlev Roman a écrit : > > Hi > So i'd like to point to the problem here. Clojure web framework in google > get these results, at least for me > 1. noir > 2. stackoverflow question 2008 year > 3. stackoverflow question 2010 year > 4. joodo ( outdated thing developed by one person) > 5. Compojure ( routing dsl) > So there is no popular framework these days for clojure. > Noir is mostly Chris Granger thing. As he make Lighttable today Noir > developed by some other people ( or may be on person not sure). Main site > instructions are nice but already outdated ( lein2). No news, no blog, no > new features, no examples, no infrastructure. Lein new project, insert noir > in dependencies and you don't have working app, you must add :main and > stuff to work. What about testing ? no info, no structure, decide on your > own. > It's no secret that web development today is biggest and popular trend. If > language and it's community have good web framework that language will gain > more popularity. > Take Ruby on rails it has over 30 core contributers, huuuge community, > active development, industry standart web development framework. Good > testing, development infrastracture, easy start, sprockets for js css > managment and so on. Also it has some books about testing and framework > itself which is good start point for newbies. > I like Clojure, for simplicity mostly. It has amazing power and i believe > it can be very good platform for web development. > So what i suggest : > Take 1 platform for web development in Clojure (for example noir as most > mature framework) . > Form working core group from 5-6 people. > Decide about name of the project ( or take Noir) > Make good site about it > Make a plan for development ( what core features should have first version) > Make first version > Make couple good examples > Make good documentation and maybe a book ( community book for example on > github that will be online and updated frequently). > -------------- > http://www.playframework.org/ good example what site could be > Alternative to online book can be guides, as for ruby on rails > http://guides.rubyonrails.org/index.html > Another good news that there is nice web IDE for Clojure by Bodil Stokke > https://github.com/bodil/catnip. Super easy install, very nice > insterface, reactive interface ( no need for browser refresh, autorecompile > when you save ) web based ! and under active development, just perfect > place for newbies to start. So this project also can be added to Clojure > Web framework project. > Also we have ClojureScript so Clojure web framework would be perfect place > where this thing can shine. > Let's discuss. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Clojure" group. To post to this group, send email to clojure@googlegroups.com Note that posts from new members are moderated - please be patient with your first post. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to clojure+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/clojure?hl=en