[BioSQL-l] Web front-ends to BioSQL
Chris Fields
cjfields at illinois.edu
Fri Jan 30 19:45:30 UTC 2009
On Jan 30, 2009, at 9:23 AM, Hilmar Lapp wrote:
> Having such a webapp would be pretty cool, and I agree with the
> argument below that there are numerous small groups or individuals
> with this need. (we have some ourselves here ...)
>
> One word of caution as to where to look for lessons I think is the
> infamous GMOD gene page and standard web front-end, which has been
> labored on in various incarnations for more than half a decade,
> without producing a compelling and broadly adopted result. People's
> needs and technology obsessions vary from place to place.
>
> One possibly hugely complicating factor for the GMOD web front-end
> was that the target audience were model organism websites, which
> themselves have a large and diverse stakeholder community, so
> flexibility and configurability became overriding requirements
> resulting in bloat of code stacks and features.
>
> My personal take is that for this to be broadly useful, the primary
> target audience should probably be programmers, or programming-savvy
> scientists, who can extend and customize a core application at will.
> In other words, much in line with the philosophy behind the Bio*
> libraries.
>
> Other than that, keep it simple so I don't have to learn yet another
> (namely your templating or clever XML configuration scheme) language
> to extend it. I sat next to Mark when he generated a bare-bones
> BioSQL-binding in EJB literally in minutes, which I thought was
> cool. People rave about Ruby and RoR too as for ease of getting
> started. By far the most people out there will be familiar with
> Perl, but I'm not sure what the web application framework would be
> there that would put me at ease. In the end what may count more than
> anything else is critical mass even if it's not everyone's darling
> language.
Perl web application framework: Catalyst and Jifty (have not tried
them myself). RoR gets a lot of press, but I understand the RoR devs
tend not to listen to the core ruby devs and (as a consequence) had
recently run into issues with the 1.8.7 ruby release, detailed by the
always-entertaining chromatic here:
http://use.perl.org/~chromatic/journal/37125
chris
> My $0.02, and I'd be keen so see what comes out of this. If there's
> something I can do to tip the balance towards something tangible
> happening, let me know.
>
> -hilmar
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