Fredrik Lundh wrote: > Bruno Desthuilliers wrote: > >>>> Meanwhile, the Web programming standardisation scene remains >>>> stagnant. >>> Aw, come on. The Python web programming standardisation wars are over, for >>> now. >>> There's Django, and there's TurboGears, >> And there's Pylons... > > and a zillion other more or less interesting research projects.
I don't think Pylons qualifies as a "research project". FWIW, I mentionned it because, while (yet) less "buzzworded" than Django and TG, it's really in the same category - but using the wsgi stack approach instead of the monolithic one. And MHO is that it could really become the next big thing in Python's web programming ecosystem. > I don't see any traces > of the kind of ecosystems and market awareness that exist for Zope, Django, > and > TurboGears (or for that matter, Rails and Mason), for any other Python web > pro- > gramming tool. Yes, true. -- bruno desthuilliers python -c "print '@'.join(['.'.join([w[::-1] for w in p.split('.')]) for p in '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.split('@')])" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list