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<title>Comments on article "Giving this cat a little walk"</title>
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<description>&lt;p&gt;I've just watched &lt;a class="reference" href="http://www.turbogears.org/docs/TurboTunes/index.html"&gt;TurboTunes&lt;/a&gt; screencast ... &lt;a class="reference" href="http://checkandshare.com/catwalk/"&gt;CatWalk&lt;/a&gt; seems to be a good piece of code which puts &lt;a class="reference" href="http://sqlobject.org"&gt;SQLObject&lt;/a&gt; in all its userfriendly point-an-click glory ! It made me think about Django's CRUD admin sites in some aspects, though Django seems a bit simpler in that particular field, in terms of ergonomy..&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But one thing hitched my tiny little hair up while watching the screencast, i was quite surprised to see Kevin code so much javascript, particularly some code (like &lt;cite&gt;retrieveGenres()&lt;/cite&gt; or &lt;cite&gt;retrieveAlbumsForArtist&lt;/cite&gt;) which to me would be much more readable in Python in a real .py file. Ok this is a buzzy Ajax app sitting in a single template, but if it's the kind of apps we'll develop in the so called Web2.0, please spare me. Though i need to play with it anyway ;)&lt;/p&gt;
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<title>Kevin Dangoor on Giving this cat a little walk</title>
<link>http://base-art.net/Comments/178/</link>
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<description><![CDATA[
Actually, I can't claim the credit for writing that. Ronald Jaramillo wrote the tutorial. I just did the narration.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you want to dynamically update things on your pages, you basically have to use JavaScript. Luckily, MochiKit makes working with JavaScript a little more Pythonic (without breaking what JavaScript is all about). I didn't think the JavaScript in that tutorial seemed particularly hairy at all, though. Maybe I'm just acclimating :)
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<dc:creator>Kevin Dangoor</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2005-11-12T20:11:03Z</dc:date>
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