Lumír Jasiok wrote:
David Bear wrote:
What do you gain by doing this?
On Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 2:50 PM, Lumir Jasiok <lumir.jasiok@vsb.cz <mailto:lumir.jasiok@vsb.cz>> wrote:
Hi,
I need to write an application which will be based on MVC design and will have both web interface and desktop GUI based on wxPython. It is possible to write such an application as standard Zope app and use zope.interfaces package for defining wxPython GUI as other view (I hope that it's called view, I am not sure - I am new in Zope programming)? Or am I totally wrong?
Best Regards
Lumir Jasiok
-- Lumír Jasiok VSB-TU Ostrava - Computer centre Tel: +420 59 732 3189 E-mail: lumir.jasiok@vsb.cz <mailto:lumir.jasiok@vsb.cz> http://www.vsb.cz
I want to have an application with common code for both web and desktop application, so data and business logic will be common and only thing which will be different will be a view (web page or desktop application GUI). So users will have choice what interface they want to use, data will be same.
As programmer I want to have common code for business logic, because of simplicity. I don't want to have two trunks, two business logics etc.
Hi, Lumir You might take a look at pyjamas (http://pyjs.org). Using pyjamas, you can have common code for business logic and also for the GUI on web and desktop. The main data transfer/persistence mechanism in pyjamas is JSON-RPC, so that part of the model can be zope or anything that can do JSON-RPC. If you like wxPython GUI code, pyjamas code is very similar, and there are examples using PureMVC (http://puremvc.org) in the repository. You cannot, at present, use zope.interface to do automatic widget generation in pyjamas. On the other hand, it is really easy to do custom widgets and client-side display logic. You write your widgets and their behavior in python, not in HTML and javascript. Styling, however, can be done with css. In the eight months since I first experimented with pyjamas (http://www.mail-archive.com/zope@zope.org/msg31618.html), it has improved substantially. Fewer gotchas. More joy. Worth a look. - Jim Washington