On 16/01/07, Ralf Schönian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I would also like to vote for Karrigell.
>
> BTW: Does anyone knows how to avoid stopping/starting of the webserver
> after changing external libraries? I have some own modules under
> /opt/local/python/lib and import them by extending the
Thanks all. It's looking like Turbogears at the moment (unless my boss
makes an executive decision). Cheers.
Duncan
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Tim Williams schrieb:
> On 15 Jan 2007 00:52:33 -0800, Torabisu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Don't overlook Karrigell either, with a tiny learning curve its
> always worth consideration, especially if you need rapid development
> and a web server that will sit on top of your exising .py module
Duncan Smith wrote:
> I've had a look at Django, Turbogears and Plone, and at the moment I am
> torn between Turbogears and Plone. I
Plone is not suited for the type of application you are building (as
others have pointed out in this thread).
Take a second look at TurboGears (or CherryPy for t
Duncan Smith a écrit :
> Hello,
> I find myself in the, for me, unusual (and at the moment unique)
> position of having to write a web application. I have quite a lot of
> existing Python code that will form part of the business logic. This
> relies on 3rd party libraries (such as numpy) wh
Duncan Smith wrote:
> Hello,
> I find myself in the, for me, unusual (and at the moment unique)
> position of having to write a web application. I have quite a lot of
> existing Python code that will form part of the business logic. This
> relies on 3rd party libraries (such as numpy) which
Tim Williams wrote:
> On 15 Jan 2007 00:52:33 -0800, Torabisu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Duncan Smith wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > > I find myself in the, for me, unusual (and at the moment unique)
> > > position of having to write a web application. I have quite a lot of
> > > existing P
On 15 Jan 2007 00:52:33 -0800, Torabisu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Duncan Smith wrote:
> > Hello,
> > I find myself in the, for me, unusual (and at the moment unique)
> > position of having to write a web application. I have quite a lot of
> > existing Python code that will form part of t
Duncan Smith wrote:
> Hello,
> I find myself in the, for me, unusual (and at the moment unique)
> position of having to write a web application. I have quite a lot of
> existing Python code that will form part of the business logic. This
> relies on 3rd party libraries (such as numpy) which