[Grok-dev] First Experience with Grok

Kevin Smith kevin at mcweekly.com
Fri Sep 14 20:37:58 EDT 2007


Shane,

A maintainable way to "remove" Rotterdam is with skins and layers 
(coming soon).  The
IDefaultBrowserLayer could also be replaced with something like 
z3c.minimallayer to have
it permanently removed.

Kevin Smith

BTW: pgstorage rocks! 

Shane Hathaway wrote:
> David Pratt wrote:
>   
>> I'd argue that Zope 3 is a framework but without one that doesn't impose 
>> limits with what you might want to do with it. It is not really 
>> 'contained' like any other framework. Maybe the framework without a 
>> frame :-) It is only configuration that explicitly binds your work 
>> together. I find it a natural place for a python programmer but others 
>> may disagree. Zope 3 may not be well marketed - but is it excellent? 
>> Certainly. Twisted is another example of this. Fortunately for folks 
>> that wish to dig deeper in Zope 3, Grok's ease ought to at least attract 
>> them to consider the journey. I am happy that Grok provides this 
>> opportunity and a welcoming community. :-)
>>     
>
> Thanks.  I know there's good stuff in there begging to be used.
>
> Unfortunately, I just had a slightly disappointing experience.  I
> entered an invalid URL and got a 404 error based on the Rotterdam skin.
>  Ugh!  IMHO, the Rotterdam skin is an example of something Zope 3 does
> badly.  I don't want the Rotterdam skin to exist in my site.  What is
> the best way to remove it?  I hackishly changed some ZCML, but is there
> a maintainable way?
>
> Shane
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Grok-dev at zope.org
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>
>   
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