The chemical and spectro-photometric evolution of spiral galaxies is
investigated with detailed models, making use of up-to-date ingredients (like
metallicity dependent stellar properties) and a prescription for the star
formation rate (SFR) justified both empirically and theoretically. As a first
application, the model is used to describe the evolution of the Milky Way. The
role of the adopted scheme of disk formation (``inside-out'') in shaping the
various chemical and colour profiles is investigated, as well as the role of
extinction. It is shown that the solar neighborhood does not evolve as the
Milky Way as a whole and that one-zone models with a non-linear SFR
prescription cannot be used to study the evolution of our Galaxy. Our model
average SFR is shown to match well observations of external spirals.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, accepted in MNRA