doc/tutorials/base/conclusion.rst
author Julien Cristau <julien.cristau@logilab.fr>
Fri, 18 Dec 2015 17:49:45 +0100
changeset 11047 bfd11ffa79f7
parent 10491 c67bcee93248
child 12378 9dcb5e4e705b
permissions -rw-r--r--
[entity] don't look at fetch order recursively If fetch_attrs includes relations, stop including the entities on the other side in our sorting. Fixes regression from 73ea636a5562 where we would sort on the target entity before the attribute we wanted if the relation's name sorted before the attribute's. This showed up in the forge/tracker cubes with Version entities being sorted by their State's name in preference to their version number.

.. -*- coding: utf-8 -*-

What's next?
------------

In this tutorial, we have seen that you can, right after the installation of
|cubicweb|, build a web application in a few minutes by defining a data model as
assembling cubes. You get a working application that you can then customize there
and there while keeping something that works. This is important in agile
development practices, you can right from the start of the project show things
to customer and so take the right decision early in the process.

The next steps will be to discover hooks, security, data sources, digging deeper
into view writing and interface customisation... Yet a lot of fun stuff to
discover! You will find more `tutorials and howtos`_ in the blog published on the
CubicWeb.org website.

.. _`tutorials and howtos`: http://www.cubicweb.org/view?rql=Any+X+ORDERBY+D+DESC+WHERE+X+is+BlogEntry%2C+T+tags+X%2C+T+name+IN+%28%22tutorial%22%2C+%22howto%22%29%2C+X+creation_date+D