Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: wefram
Version: 0.2.46
Summary: Wefram web platform
Home-page: https://github.com/nf-it/wefram
Author: Denis Khodus
Author-email: deniskhodus@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: Wefram platform
        ===============
        
        **Wefram** is the open source platform used to create complex web projects consisting of
        both backend and frontend parts, allowing using both SSR (server-side rendering) using
        template renders, and CSR (client-side rendering) using *React* based SPA (single page
        application) approach.
        
        The main point is to handle as much as possible repeating or taking much of time elements
        of the development process by the platform (let's not name is "framework", okay?), giving
        programmers time to make end-point code of corresponding project applications only.
        
        The another goal of using Wefram is the ability of dividing the entire project into
        applications, often independent on each other. This provides us the posibility to
        write sometimes small, somethimes just funtion-resolving modules (applications) and
        store them in the repository, and re-use when needed. You may see many analogies with
        other module-based frameworks such as *Django* or *Flask*. But Wefram takes in work
        a lightly much, then those frameworks, providing already pre-developed, ready to
        use frontend SPA platform (React-based), and programmers of the project only focuses
        on the target functional code of the project modules, not wasting time on the
        frontend basics development, SSR & CSR integration into a single project, etc.
        
        
        Approach
        --------
        
        The platform consists of itself (installed from *pypi* with *pip*) and developed and
        enabled project's applications. So, the final project will have a set of modules, named
        "applications", placed in the project's directory, and a set of backend and frontend
        third-party packages (both for backend & frontend).
        
        
        Written on
        ----------
        
        Like any client-server project, the Wefram-based project will consist of two main
        parts:
        
        * Backend, which is written in **Python 3**.
        * Frontend, which is written mainly in **TypeScript & React** or **templated HTML**.
        
        The frontend part is lightly more interesting than just a TypeScript or just a
        React. While we speak about two variants of render - SSR & CSR, we about to
        handle two different approachs.
        
        If we speak about regular, search engines (Google, Yandex...) indexing site - 
        we usually speak about SSR with pre-rendered HTML code returning to the browser.
        Wefram uses *Jinja2* template engine to render the HTML on the server side. To
        provide assets like CSS, JS scripts and so on, the Wefram uses assets approach,
        which makes possible to build assets from all enabled applications into understandable
        and easy to use structure, which can be directly handled by the web server like
        *nginx* or *apache*.
        
        If we speak about site's administrative panel, about corporate portal, about some another 
        kind of business logics, used primary on workplaces - we speak about SPA (single page
        application), we speak about CSR (client-side rendering), about traffic economy, reusing
        same pre-built program code by clients' browsers without needing of reloading everything.
        Here we speak about *React* which is based (in our configuration) on *TypeScript*.
        
        The Wefram combines both described above approachs into one project. This means that
        a single project may have both SSR and CSR applications, modules, etc. This allows
        not to divide a project into independent parts, combining all in one place.
        
        This not requires, for example, the project to have SSR pages. Wefram gives this
        posibility, but only when the project needs it. For example, if we have a regular
        site, for example with a set of services for the end user, and we want to make
        a some kind of reservation system for those services - we will make several
        SSR pages (to be easyly indexed by search engines) basing on Jinja2, HTML,
        CSS and pure JS; and make a workspace for employee, administering those reservations
        and services, with CSR using *React & TypeScript*.
        
        
        Applications
        ------------
        
        While many projects divides the entire project horizontally - to the "all backend"
        and "all frontend", the *Wefram* uses another approach - it dividing the entire
        project vertically, to "modules", names "applications".
        
        The every application consists of backend part (even almost empty) and optional
        frontend part. Why the frontend is optional? Because (a) the application may handle
        some work without any client side control (for example, make regular integration with
        another service, or give a facility on, for example, sending messages via Telegram),
        and (b) because Wefram gives several interesting backend-realized approachs, whose
        may exclude needs of frontend programming for simple tasks (for example, the
        applicaion's programmer relieved of the need to make settings, properties handling,
        administering simple database models on the frontend and so on).
        
        So, while the application consists of both backend and frontend, it makes much
        easier to install to the project and deinstall from the project applications,
        developing application outside the main project and then easily adding it to
        the project, etc. **The point is that makes much easily to divide the entire project
        into reusable and often independent parts.**
        
        
        Localization
        ------------
        
        One of the main our targets was to make the platform localization-ready from the
        begining, as one of main goals. Because of this, everywhere, where that is possible,
        we made the localization interfaces and interesting localization approach. We will
        speak about it in the documentation, in the separate section.
        
        
        Where we are
        ------------
        
        The Wefram is in active development and about 80% ready to be published. Much
        of work on documenting is still in progress (which take a lot of time), some
        interesting ideas are in progress.
        
        But several really living projects are already in live, already basing on the
        Wefram platform and successfully working.
        
        
        
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: Unix
Requires-Python: ==3.9
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
