On Sep 9, 12:47 pm, Vineet <vineet.deod...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sep 9, 3:29 am, Paul Watson <paul.hermeneu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I have read some of the talk around these two frameworks. > > > Would you say that web2py is more geared toward the enterprise? > > > Which one do you believe will be on Python 3 more quickly? > > Both Django & web2py are good frameworks. > I have tried both of them + others & then chosen a hybrid of web2py + > DABO bizobj for my work. > (DABO is a desktop app framework; so I have chosen only the BizObj > layer from it, which can do its job in any other python web or desktop > framework). > > Typically, my apps are data-centric business apps. > web2py wins in simplicity, flexibility, no install, no dependencies, > good docs & community, low learning curve, etc. > > DABO BizObj excels in managing the business logic aspect. > With DABO bizobj layer, apart from the business logic, managing > multiple tables insert/update/delete, rollback, before-insert, after- > save, etc. is very handy... the list is quite long) > (I know you will say that every framework has got its own DAL. It's > true. But most of them are designed for basic database functions.) > > Some useful > links---http://web2py.comwww.web2pyclices.comhttp://thewinecellarbook.com/daboDocTestAlt/dabo.lib.datanav.Bizobj.B...http://dabodev.com/ > > Also, there are threads in stackoverflow.com which discuss in-depth > the +1 & -1 for these frameworks. > Contributors to these threads include the lead developers including > Massimo himself. > > Hope this helps. > > ---Vineet
Re. your point about porting from py2 to py3, the following thread makes it clear. http://groups.google.com/group/web2py/browse_thread/thread/5fcd0e97452e9ab8/d38f99b959778cfb?lnk=gst&q=python+3#d38f99b959778cfb ---Vineet -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list