Feb 3
So I started reading the CakePHP manual (after cheating and going through the example blog creation code, which is part of the manual). I'm learning it's much more powerful than I had originally thought. Like I said, I started reading the manual...then I realized just how long it was.

I'm now printing it out. It's used up about 1/3 of a ream of paper...and this printer has a duplexer, so it's printing on the front and back of the pages. The only complaint I have is that originally, the manual had chapter numbers, now the chapter sections use names only...unfortunately, the manual references chapters and chapter sections by the numerical association in some places. I'd also like a single PDF version of the whole thing (and that's saying a lot considering my hatred for PDFs). Otherwise, the manual's written very well, and in an informal writing style. Very easy to read. Even though it says you won't need a knowledge of MVC - not having a short background education in it might get you pretty confused.

Either way, it's my suggested reading for those of you looking for a framework. If you don't decide on CakePHP, it might help you understand how the other frameworks (could possibly) work.

Posted by Brendon Kozlowski

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  1. Brendon says:

    There is a PDF version of the CakePHP manual - I just found it today. There's also an easier form of HTML, a CHM version, and CHM versions of the API. I needed to look on CakeForge to find them.

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