[Twisted-Python] IBM developer works
Glyph Lefkowitz
glyph at twistedmatrix.com
Wed Aug 20 07:18:44 MDT 2003
On Wednesday, August 20, 2003, at 05:54 AM, Richard Johannesson wrote:
> Is there a good article on how to use Twisted for doing
> web applications for instance? Is Twisted / Woven a good
> way to go for web applications?
This article is not particularly bad, as far as that goes; (aside from
the minor gaffe of defining a class in an RPY file which is mislabeled
".py") I think it's unfair to say it's "like PHP". That said, the
article is about writing a web application, and Twisted works best when
you reconfigure the sub-atomic particles in your brain to completely
disassociate the concepts of "web" and "application".
Woven encourages you to develop a completely separate,
separately-testable abstraction of your application, then wrap that
with web-specific code. David's article is just showing you the
web-specific code part of that, and his "application objects" are lists
of dictionaries of strings; nothing too sophisticated.
The trouble with documenting such a system is that it's geared towards
doing non-trivial things. If your example is non-trivial, then you can
get carried away with explaining the example rather than explaining
what the example is supposed to demonstrate. If it's trivial, then you
end up with abbreviated versions of things which are intended for more
sophisticated use-cases, and so they don't always make sense.
For what it's worth, I think David's articles are doing a good job of
finding that balance. I'm sure that we'll need a lot more
documentation before it's clear, though.
Maybe this should be Twisted's motto: "Making theoretically impossible
things easy, and easy things theoretically possible."
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