Dotan Cohen a écrit :
2009/10/28 Bruno Desthuilliers <bruno.42.desthuilli...@websiteburo.invalid>:
Dotan Cohen a écrit :
declarative mapping of urls to code
Apache does this, unless I am misunderstanding you.
Using url rewriting ? Yes, fine. Then tell me how you implement "reverse"
url generation (like Django or Routes do).
I have no idea what reverse url generation is.
It's a mean to avoid hard-coding urls in your application code - the url
is fully generated by the 'url mapping' system.
I assume that the user
will call http://example.com/path/to/script.py?var1=hello&var2=world
script.py would live in /home/user/site-name/public_html/path/to/
Now try to use apache url rewrites to use "nice urls" (like,
"/<section-name>/<sub-section-name>/<article-name>" instead of
"path/to/script-serving-articles.wtf?id=42"). Good luck.
of code to templates
Those who code in HTML don't need this.
???
I would prefer to output everything from <html> to </html> with print
statements. I don't want some framework wrapping my output in tags, I
want the tags to be part of the output.
You're confusing the framework and the templating system. The framework
by itself won't wrap your "output" in anything, nor even forces you to
"output" HTML. Also FWIW, it's HTTP, so we don't have "outputs", we have
HTTP responses.
In any case it's not hard to
call a function in a class that writes the HTML before the content,
then write the content, then call another function that writes the
HTML after the content.
Hmmm, yummy ! And SO maintainable...
Yes, why not?
Let's say I want to reuse your app with a different presentation. Do I
have to fork the whole application and send my HTML coder dig into your
applicative code just to rewrite the HTML parts ?
This is how my sites are run, though in PHP
instead of Python. No prepackaged templates.
PHP *is* a template language.
(snip)
I would really like to know what else. So far, I am not convinced that
a framework offers anything that is not already easily accomplished in
Python.
Given that we're talking about Python frameworks, it seems obvious that what
they do can be accomplished in Python. Now the question is how much you like
to write the same boring and error-prone boilerplate code project after
project...
Like I said before, I don't want to have to maintain the functions
that turn the HTTP environment into Python variables,
"HTTP environment" ???
Oh, you mean HTTP requests etc... Well, the cgi module already provides
some basic support here.
or the code that
manages database connections. Functions that escape data to be sent to
MySQL (to prevent sql injection) would be nice.
Any DB-API compliant module already provide this - granted you use it
correctly.
Other than that, it's
all on me.
Your choice...
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