Philosophy ========== The `Pareto Principle`_ states that *roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes.* In software development terms, this could be translated into something along the lines of *80% of the results come from 20% of the complexity*. In other words, you can get pretty far by being pretty stupid. **Idiorm is deliberately simple**. Where other ORMs consist of dozens of classes with complex inheritance hierarchies, Idiorm has only one class, ``ORM``, which functions as both a fluent ``SELECT`` query API and a simple CRUD model class. If my hunch is correct, this should be quite enough for many real-world applications. Let’s face it: most of us aren’t building Facebook. We’re working on small-to-medium-sized projects, where the emphasis is on simplicity and rapid development rather than infinite flexibility and features. You might think of **Idiorm** as a *micro-ORM*. It could, perhaps, be “the tie to go along with `Slim`_\ ’s tux” (to borrow a turn of phrase from `DocumentCloud`_). Or it could be an effective bit of spring cleaning for one of those horrendous SQL-littered legacy PHP apps you have to support. **Idiorm** might also provide a good base upon which to build higher-level, more complex database abstractions. For example, `Paris`_ is an implementation of the `Active Record pattern`_ built on top of Idiorm. .. _Pareto Principle: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_principle .. _Slim: http://github.com/codeguy/slim/ .. _DocumentCloud: http://github.com/documentcloud/underscore .. _Paris: http://github.com/j4mie/paris .. _Active Record pattern: http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/activeRecord.html