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| | #1 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: London, England
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I need to go back and do some PHP coding for the first time in a little while. When I last looked into doing some coding I found that the MVC frameworks like cakePHP allowed me to get something almost finished really quickly, and then took ages to sort out what seemed to be really simple problems. I was never quite sure it it was worth the effort. So - have any of the coders out there used cakePHP, symfony etc? How do you find them? Should I be looking at a non-MVC framework? Sorry if this isn't quite the right place to ask this - I've not been on here too long and I'm not sure if this is a bit too geeky. James If you are doing a bit of PHP coding I would take a look at some of these frameworks - they can really speed up the coding process - or at least they *should* be able to. |
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| | #2 |
| SocialAdr.com War Room Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: San Diego
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It would help if you described what you were trying to accomplish with your "PHP coding". Your question is definitely not too geeky, but there's so many options out there and choosing the best one is highly dependent on what exactly you want to create.. |
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| | #3 |
| Gleb War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Ottawa, Canada
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I think CakePHP covers 95% of coding tasks and specs. I did research in the past comparing frameworks for one of my projects and Cake PHP won. I never got my hands on the project though - lol - but doing that research was quite a bit of analysis. Gleb |
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| | #4 |
| Tom Campbell War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Seattle, WA
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You don't say what you want it for. Cake's really good. I like CodeIgniter better, but have 0 experience with cakePHP admittedly. Depending on the site there's also Drupal (awesome for group sites) or even WordPress.
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| | #5 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: London, England
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I have had a good play with cakePHP in the past - it was great to start off with & then suddenly you hit a brick wall to find out how to do something quite minor. I had a good go at Symfony yesterday - and the documentation seems good. If I actually get round to using it I'll let you how it goes. So far I'm very impressed. As for Drupal, we use it all the time, but I hadn't thought about using it. It *might* be possible to hack something together with the CCK module. The project is something mainly in-house for feeding and editing RSS feeds. So we can keep track on what's going on and let people know about it easily. |
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| | #7 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: London, England
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Hmm. I'll check it out, although I only really use Linux & when I'm doing GUI stuff I tend to use python with one of the x-windows libraries.
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| | #8 |
| Active Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: , , United Kingdom.
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aha - I meant windows as an example of event driven programming- so qcodo is fine for other other platforms also I haver developed a number of web applications with it, and it really makes life easy if there is a database involved! its also used by NASA for some of their internal systems :-) One note - there is a more evolved version of the framework called QCUBED which has a good community around it good luck with whatever you choose..... cheers Tony |
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| | #9 |
| The Wandering Businessman War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: The Globe
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I'm working on a web statistics program and I'd like to start using a framework that makes editing files really easy. Can anyone recommend one? Thanks! |
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| | #10 |
| Active Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: , , United Kingdom.
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if its a database then qcodo or qcubed is probably the best as a lot of the code is generated for you, but I'm not sure which is best for just plain/text files!
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| | #11 | |
| The Wandering Businessman War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: The Globe
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| | #13 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: New York
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I always get programmers asking me if they can they use a certain php framework when developing my web application. My question, is it really necessary? Why cant they just use regular php and html? I dont understand it. Please help. Also, if they decide to use a particular framework can I EASILY move my app over to another host without messing everything up? Thanks Mike |
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| Tags |
| framework, mvc, php |
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