Re: framework [message #181110 is a reply to message #181100] |
Sun, 14 April 2013 08:36 |
Tony Marston
Messages: 57 Registered: November 2010
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Is this ERP application going to have a web front end? Whether it does or
does not I would always define an ERP application as being a back-end
administrative application which has restricted access. A front end website
on the other hand is open to all members of the public.
The other major difference is that a front-end website is fairly restricted
in what it does - display products and accept orders - whereas the back-end
application has to do everything else. This "everything else" covers the
maintenance of the product details as well as order processing (also known
as order fulfilment, logistics, or supply chain management).
Some organisations build the front and back end applications as separate
applications which do not share any code, only the database. Sometimes this
is because they develop each in a different language, or they use different
development teams which do not talk to each other. I have been designing and
developing these back-end applications for several decades, and I now
develop them in PHP. This enables me to create a web front-end in the same
language, but this in itself is not good enough. What you really need is an
application architecture which allows components to be easily shared, and
the best architecture for this (IMHO) is the 3 Tier Architecture (3TA). This
has separate components in each of the Presentation, Business and Data
Access layers. Some people seem to think that the only benefit of the 3TA is
that you can change the Data Access component so that you can switch to
another DBMS, but what they fail to notice is that you can also change the
Presentation layer to give another view or window into the same code base.
This means that you can develop your back-end application with its own
Presentation, Business and Data Access layers, then build a front-end
website consisting of nothing more than a different Presentation layer which
shares the Business and Data Access layers of the back-end application.
I have actually built a commercial ERP application as a package which is now
being used by several different organisations which sell different
products - custom jewellery, baby clothes, and photographic prints - each
with their own unique front-end websites but each sharing the same back-end
application (but different copies).
To duplicate what I have done you need a framework which specialises in
back-end applications, not front-end websites, and which utilises the 3 Tier
Architecture. It should also include a mechanism for Role Based Access
Control, Audit Logging, and perhaps a Workflow system. All this is explained
in the following documents:
Why you should build your web application back-to-front -
http://www.tonymarston.net/php-mysql/back-to-front.html
What is a Framework? -
http://www.tonymarston.net/php-mysql/what-is-a-framework.html
I hope this helps.
> pankaj21pathak(at)gmail(dot)com wrote in message
> news:a1ada2b3-ac77-40ef-9d2b-d738142e2d94(at)googlegroups(dot)com...
> kindly suggest me which is best framework for erp development.
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