Quote:
Originally Posted by bendsley
You might search Digg.com for Rails and PHP. There is an article that was on there today about O'reilly going from PHP to Ruby on Rails in 2005. Now, they are going back to PHP. Good read.
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It was interesting, but ultimately it highlights that large, legacy-heavy bespoke applications aren't a good match for ANY framework. Frameworks by definition make a lot of decisions for you. For very large applications with (god help the poor bastards) 95-table legacy databases... You're probably best off working from scratch.