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PHP Framework - doable?

PHP Framework - doable?

From:
Rick Sinclair
Date:
2010-12-09 @ 23:04
Hey guys,

I've been working with a nicely structured (oop) web development MVC  
framework called Concrete5.  In order to advance my computing kungFu I  
dumped MS.  (I never really knew how sick I was.)  New to ubuntu (10.10  
Maverick), Subversion and even Vim - though I've got the gVim vimrc file  
shebanging away - so that's good.

Question: I wanted to look into Eclipse to see if the IDE thing would help  
with the discovery of existing classes/objects/methods within the  
framework.  Some code completion and debugging is somewhat interesting -  
but not at the expense of some big clunky IDE.  Is PIDA a more realistic  
option (than Eclipse) for me?

I've read where PIDA is mainly written for Python, the work I'm doing is  
mostly your typical php, html, etc stuff.  Am I barking up the right tree  
here with PIDA???

Thanks,

Rick

BTW: I don't see much action on this list, but then again I have been  
learning that most programmers don't seem to take the time to fully  
develop their environments in order to increase productivity (?).



Linux kernel = Debian :: Ubuntu :: Opera  >>  Conversion

Re: [pida] PHP Framework - doable?

From:
Ali Afshar
Date:
2010-12-09 @ 23:17
Hi Rick,

Thanks for your interest in PIDA. Certainly I know of no PHP plugins
for PIDA, so you would have to write it. PIDA developers don't use
PHP, and since it is optimised for us, no one has written that plugin.
That's really the nature of PIDA, it will enable you to create your
most productive environment.

Regards

On 9 December 2010 23:04, Rick Sinclair <rcs@ricalsin.com> wrote:
> Hey guys,
> I've been working with a nicely structured (oop) web development MVC
> framework called Concrete5.  In order to advance my computing kungFu I
> dumped MS.  (I never really knew how sick I was.)  New to ubuntu (10.10
> Maverick), Subversion and even Vim - though I've got the gVim vimrc file
> shebanging away - so that's good.
> Question: I wanted to look into Eclipse to see if the IDE thing would help
> with the discovery of existing classes/objects/methods within the framework.
>  Some code completion and debugging is somewhat interesting - but not at the
> expense of some big clunky IDE.  Is PIDA a more realistic option (than
> Eclipse) for me?
> I've read where PIDA is mainly written for Python, the work I'm doing is
> mostly your typical php, html, etc stuff.  Am I barking up the right tree
> here with PIDA???
> Thanks,
> Rick
>
> BTW: I don't see much action on this list, but then again I have been
> learning that most programmers don't seem to take the time to fully develop
> their environments in order to increase productivity (?).
>
> Linux kernel = Debian :: Ubuntu :: Opera  >>  Conversion

Re: [pida] PHP Framework - doable?

From:
Rick Sinclair
Date:
2010-12-09 @ 23:29
Thank you, Ali.

Unfortunately, writing a PHP PIDA-plugin would be beyond my ability.  I  
will be looking into Python in the near future, so I'll keep PIDA on my  
mind.  Does anyone know of a gVim plugin that is built for web dev work?   
I'm wanting to harness the power of vim if possible.

Thanks,

On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 15:17:47 -0800, Ali Afshar <aafshar@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Rick,
>
> Thanks for your interest in PIDA. Certainly I know of no PHP plugins
> for PIDA, so you would have to write it. PIDA developers don't use
> PHP, and since it is optimised for us, no one has written that plugin.
> That's really the nature of PIDA, it will enable you to create your
> most productive environment.
>
> Regards
>
> On 9 December 2010 23:04, Rick Sinclair <rcs@ricalsin.com> wrote:
>> Hey guys,
>> I've been working with a nicely structured (oop) web development MVC
>> framework called Concrete5.  In order to advance my computing kungFu I
>> dumped MS.  (I never really knew how sick I was.)  New to ubuntu (10.10
>> Maverick), Subversion and even Vim - though I've got the gVim vimrc file
>> shebanging away - so that's good.
>> Question: I wanted to look into Eclipse to see if the IDE thing would  
>> help
>> with the discovery of existing classes/objects/methods within the  
>> framework.
>>  Some code completion and debugging is somewhat interesting - but not  
>> at the
>> expense of some big clunky IDE.  Is PIDA a more realistic option (than
>> Eclipse) for me?
>> I've read where PIDA is mainly written for Python, the work I'm doing is
>> mostly your typical php, html, etc stuff.  Am I barking up the right  
>> tree
>> here with PIDA???
>> Thanks,
>> Rick
>>
>> BTW: I don't see much action on this list, but then again I have been
>> learning that most programmers don't seem to take the time to fully  
>> develop
>> their environments in order to increase productivity (?).
>>
>> Linux kernel = Debian :: Ubuntu :: Opera  >>  Conversion


-- 





Linux kernel = Debian :: Ubuntu :: Opera  >>  Conversion