On Thursday, April 25, 2013 1:12:13 AM UTC+7, Marco Tulio wrote:
> thanks for taking your time to give your point of view...
>
no worries, bud, that's what community are for.
> couldn't read your name though.. are those characters chinese? Could be
> japanese, but since japanese kanji are bas
thanks for taking your time to give your point of view... couldn't read
your name though.. are those characters chinese? Could be japanese, but
since japanese kanji are based on chinese, it would be a fair mistake by an
outsider.. :)
2013/4/24 黄祥
> On Wednesday, April 24, 2013 9:22:24 PM UTC+
On Wednesday, April 24, 2013 9:22:24 PM UTC+7, Marco Tulio wrote:
> I'm aware of that... but again, just trying to get enough to tell people
> who've been working with Java for so long, to understand why web2py... your
> reasoning sounds easier to understand, although I'd made it slightly
> dif
I'm aware of that... but again, just trying to get enough to tell people
who've been working with Java for so long, to understand why web2py... your
reasoning sounds easier to understand, although I'd made it slightly
diferent:
1. "why a framework and not starting from scratch"
2. "why web2py and n
I'd start by "why python and not java" and continue with "why a framework
and not starting from scratch" and end with "why web2py and not some other
python framework".
Everything else would be comparing the incomparable... it goes without
saying, not everything is black and white, try to keep a
I'm aware of that.
but, when you opt to use java on your development environment, you'll there
are certain aspects that you'll have to take into account. For ex: Java
usually will use more processor and memory, costs on hosting java are way
more expensive than any other language/framework, develop
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