[ZDP] BackTalk to Document Zope Developer's Guide (2.4
edition)/Introduction
webmaster at zope.org
webmaster at zope.org
Sat Nov 29 18:40:08 EST 2003
A comment to the paragraph below was recently added via http://zope.org/Documentation/Books/ZDG/current/Introduction.stx#1-1
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This guide is intended to document Zope for the second audience,
developers, as defined above. If you fit more into the "user"
audience defined above, you'll probably want to start by reading
"The Zope Book":http://www.zope.org/Members/michel/ZB/ . If
you fit more into the "administrator" audience defined above,
you'll likely be interested in "The Zope Administrator's
Guide":http://www.zope.org/DocProjects/AdminGuide, although it
is currently unfinished.
% Anonymous User - Oct. 23, 2003 10:19 pm:
Then why don't you come up with the examples and contribute them?
% Anonymous User - Oct. 26, 2003 2:54 am:
Is there a cross reference system for all this literature somewhere? A system
in which I look up say "tal:content" and find links to appropriate places in
The Zope Book, How-tos, ZDG, etc.?
Tom Snell
% Anonymous User - Nov. 29, 2003 6:40 pm:
Great. So in order to create a web page with this, we now need YET another programming language on a system,
and need to learn YET ANOTHER scripting language.
Why isn't Python used in more places than - say - Perl, PHP, Java, C, or C++? In short, Python Blows Monkey
Chunks. I don't want to use a lisp-like language with some Perl and C functionality thrown every now and then
in what they perceive as "objects".
Python, Perl, and other scripting languages should be thrown back into the dark abysmal holes from which
their prototyped shells came from. Who in their right mind is going to use a Python-based web -APPLICATION-
server on their box? And pay for it?
The only reason people are using this is because no one is paying for it. And if they DID have to pay for it,
they wouldn't buy it. Web application developers are mainly looking for ways to get to market quickly, and
looking for a larger ROI. Now, we're forced to learn another language, another convoluted, mish-mashed way of
putting something together, and hoping and praying to God that our code works, and works every time. EVERY
time.
Products like these are only free if your time has no value. This goes for ANY Open Source software in
general. There's no throat to choke when something breaks. You hope and pray that someone will fix the
problem - or at least post a work-around - when you encounter one. I wish all of you luck in your pursuits
with Zope.
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