Posted by Tony Marston on 01/22/07 13:12
"NC" <nc@iname.com> wrote in message
news:1169422623.105070.58510@m58g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> Vincent Delporte wrote:
>>
>> I'm only starting to look at how to write business apps
>> as web applications, and would like some feedback
>> on frameworks to ease the pain.
>
> Frameworks can't ease the pain. They only replace one
> pain (repetitive coding) with another (being unable to expand
> beyond the limitations of the framework in a way that is
> consistent with the framework's rules).
>
>> Considering this... which PHP framework would you
>> recommend?
>
> The best framework is no framework. Alternatively, the
> best framework for your application is the one that was
> written specifically to support the development of that
> application.
I disagree. If you think that you require a totally different framework for
each application then you know nothing of building frameworks. It most
definitely *IS* possible because I first produced such a framework in 1985
when working for a software house. Our job was writing new applications, and
I designed and built a standard framework which could (and was) used for a
series of completely different applications. I have since rebuilt that
framework in two totally different languages - the latest being PHP - and I
have no problem with using it for a variety of different applications.
--
Tony Marston
http://www.tonymarston.net
http://www.radicore.org
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