> Emmanuel Surleau a écrit : > >> Django : very strong integration, excellent documentation and support, > >> huge community, really easy to get started with. And possibly a bit more > >> mature and stable... > > > > One strong point in favour of Django: it follows Python's philosophy of > > "batteries included", and features a large array of plugins. There are > > also numerous other add-ons created by the community. > > > > Also, it has a pretty great administration interface. > > > > It still manages to retain flexibility, but you're basically stuck with > > Django's ORM > > You're by no way "stuck" with Django's ORM - you are perfectly free not > to use it. But then you'll obviously loose quite a lot of useful > features and 3rd part apps...
You lose most of what makes it worth using Django, so you're in effect kind of stuck with it. If you don't need/want the ORM, you might as well use something else. > > (which is OK for simple things) and templating language (which is > > OK as long as you don't need custom tags). > > Custom tags are nothing complicated. Compared to custom tags in, say, Mako? Having to implement a mini-parser for each single tag when you can write a stupid Python function is needless complication. Cheers, Emm -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list