You expect to hand a non-technical client something that looks like:

http://blog.riff.org/files/Project8.png

?? I thing that would go poorly. Besides, pencil + paper goes a long
way in client discussions like that.

 -justin

On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 1:22 PM, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> So I had this idea and was looking for some thoughts on this:
> When starting a new website, normally a client gives you a handful of
> documents
> on what he/she wants. Most of the time this person is technically
> illiterate so
> interpreting what he/she into a django model is often a challenge.
> i propose this cool idea called a the django-uml generator that would
> work my simply doing
> this: python manage.py umlgen SOME_MODEL_NAME and magically you have
> a
> nice type of document or some data the could import into a document
> based upon how the
> model was defined. How would this be useful? In return to the non
> technical documentation
> that was given you would have some sort of document that you could go
> over with the client
> to make sure what was written in their documentation meets what you
> output from the models
> before you syncdb and doing further coding. It seems like you could
> save a lot of headaches
> at a later point with this method. Thoughts?
> >
>


-- 
Justin Lilly
Web Developer/Designer
http://justinlilly.com

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