Mezzanine might be a bit more popular than TurboGears. We know about 5 links to it since March 2021 and only 4 links to TurboGears. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I've recently started playing around with Mezzanine, a django-based CMS. I recently just managed to configure Fabric to get it uploading to my host, webfaction.com, as its a bit more involved automatically creating the website on the shared hosting, and I wanted to automate that process. Source: about 2 years ago
To give you a better idea of how Python-based applications work on our servers, we’ll show you how to install the Django framework-powered Mezzanine CMS on our platform via SSH. - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
There is also Mezzanine / Cartridge which is kinda like WordPress / WooCommerce in the PHP world, it’s primarily for a website that may have a shop added to it. Be aware that this is also somewhat legacy, last time I checked it was kinda in maintenance mode and the variant system for products was super limited. Source: about 2 years ago
Mezzanine / Cartridge is similar to WooCommerce in the WordPress world, if you are wanting to add a shop to an existing site then this is a decent option. The problem with it is that the main dev on it went off to work for Google so it’s more or less in maintenance mode and the product variant system is very basic. Source: over 2 years ago
Mezzanine is probably a simpler one. It recently just got revived and their 5.0 release is now in rc1 state. There's also django-fiber which seems to be quite simple (not much code, one app to add only). Source: over 2 years ago
TurboGears is another Python web framework that is scalable. It starts as a microframework and can scale up to a full-stack framework. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Building, constructing, and maintaining websites is a broad definition of web development. A front-end, which communicates with the client, and a back-end, which contains business logic and interacts with a database, are typical components of web development. Python also supports quite a percentage of the total websites, web apps and software running in the world wide web. The libraries that are applied in web... - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
I've pretty much tried every Python web framework that exists, and it took me a long time to realize there wasn't a silver bullet framework, each had its own advantages and disadvantages. I started out with Snakelets and heartily enjoyed being able to control almost everything at a lower level without much fuss, but then I discovered TurboGears and I have been using it (1.x) ever since. Tools like Catwalk and the... Source: about 2 years ago
Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be many really popular MVC frameworks for Python. There IS Turbogears, but it doesn't seem that popular. https://turbogears.org/. Source: almost 3 years ago
Sitecake - Drag and drop CMS for HTML websites. It's flat file CMS so it's pretty fast.
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
django CMS - Enterprise Content Management with Django The open-source CMS used by thousands of websites since 2007
Flask - a microframework for Python based on Werkzeug, Jinja 2 and good intentions.
TYPO3 - TYPO3.com - Infos, SLAs, Extended Support Versions and more
CherryPy - CherryPy allows developers to build web applications in much the same way they would build any other object-oriented Python program.