[Ilugc] [JOB]Opportunities for Python Developers/ Web application developers
- From: vamlists@xxxxxxxxx (Vamsee Kanakala)
- Date: Wed Jan 30 11:55:53 2008
Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
no flame war intended - but tg is not suited for anything that you
want to scale. Just check out the sites running django and compare
them to the sites running tg.
That would be a rather arbitrary scale for judging TG. I'm not very
familiar with either of the frameworks, but a site's responsiveness (if
that is what you are referring to) also depends a lot on the hardware
that runs it. If run on a feeble machine, the most brilliantly coded web
app would seem slow.
I would say the activity of a project is a better way to judge such
stuff - in which case, TG hardly seems to be 'dead in the water' - the
latest commit being on Jan 21st. There ought to be more objective
reasons for that kind of statement.
Also, though unrelated, the TG way of doing things, i.e., putting
together a bunch of open source web components and tying them together
with a framework is just getting traction in the Ruby world too, viz.,
Merb as against Rails (which along with Django seems to favor monolithic
core libraries).
V.
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