The most modest way is to use pure Python and interface via CGI with the web. I would start there.
As you code you will find yourself saying "I wonder if a framework is out there that already has automated this specific process (say templating)?", well then you can search and find such a framework. If you pick a framework you are not familiar with right from the start then besides your original problem that you want o solve, you have another problem -- that of learning a new framework. You will end up molding your problem to some framework (this is not necessarily a very bad thing) rather than finding a framework that helps you solve the problem. --Nick V. John Henry wrote: > Hi folks. > > I am interested on this topic as well. > > If my application is not database related, what would be a good choice? > > I have clients that wish to use my Python applications but I am not > willing to give them the code. So, I am thinking about setting it up > as a web based application and let them run it from their browser. If > things go well, may be I can charge them for usage later. > > The application will involve getting a data file from the user, do some > processing, and return a result file to the user. Very modest - to > start. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list