The answer may be based on 4 aspects:

1.- simplicity: we all hate write tons of code for simple tasks like in java, this is the reason why we use php, importing design patterns from java/university world is good, but usually independent developers like me need dev speed more than enterprise employees.

2.- backend: how easy will be building a backend in symfony 2 vs lithium?. not always we build a facebook like project and we need our preferred framework to get the job done on little projects too.

3.- community and docs

4.- performance: scale good with the minimum

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Symfony 2 is not yet released, you know. – FractalizeR Aug 29 '10 at 19:05
@FratalizeR yes I know, following symfony since the 0 version, and not planning to use it for production, but if you read the code, you see twig templates for creating even kernels, so the code gives enough clues to see how it's planed to be. for being an expert on symfony 2 the next summer, you should be working on it and following the progress right now. the size of the supporting community can be predicted because fabien and company did a very much talked conference with all this "secret feature" stuff so they could measure their online reputation and so we can. just playing the wise guy? – Alfonso de la Osa Aug 30 '10 at 9:35
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As the lead developer of Lithium, my answer is going to be a little biased, but I'll try to address each one of your points in brief:

  1. I believe the code required to write a Lithium app is simpler and more concise than the corresponding Symfony code would be. We favor more declarative, idiomatic code, and less configuration.

  2. Lithium scales down to small applications quite well, even very tiny ones. See the "Route Handlers" section of this post for an example of how to design a micro-app in a single file: http://dev.lithify.me/lithium/wiki/blog/Lithium-0-9-The-Lambdas-are-awesome-Edition

  3. Lithium has fairly comprehensive (and growing) API documentation (http://lithify.me/docs/), as well as a set of tutorials (http://dev.lithify.me/drafts/source/en) and various other documentation, which we are developing a portal to aggregate. Our community is small, but very solid and growing rapidly. Also, we're fortunate enough to have some very high-ranking members of the PHP community in our user base, including PHP documentation and core code contributors, and popular conference speakers, including these guys: http://analog.coop, these guys: http://fictivekin.com/ and the founder and former lead developer of the Joomla project.

  4. Lithium's core code is fairly well optimized, but the most important part about it is that it doesn't remove any choices from you about your application's performance. Because there is always a trade-off between performance and speed of development, Lithium allows you to get up and running quickly, but makes it easy to change how the framework operates in order to performance-tune it to your specific needs. You can easily enable and disable features, and replace core classes with your own implementations.

Hope that helps!

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Lithium is looking great, and I agree with you on point 1 and 2. Only when it comes to documentation Symfony is clearly ahead. I found it much easier to get into Symfony compared to Lithium. Having said that, I like how Lithium seems cleaner and lighter, which hopefully also make Lithium a winner when it comes to point 4, performance. I'm looking forward to Lithium 1.0, and a bit more documentation a la guides.rubyonrails.org :) – Beatlevic Apr 4 '11 at 20:26
Totally agree with Beatlevic. Please, write more documentation. Lithium looks really impressive. It is clean and beautiful but amount of documentation available is confusing =( – Armen Markossyan Sep 15 '11 at 19:25
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Well, we also have a comprehensive manual which is growing and being added to daily: lithify.me/docs/manual -- so between that and the newly-launched Sphere app (sphere.orchestra.io), we should have completely comprehensive documentation shortly. – Nate Abele Sep 23 '11 at 19:32
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