On Tuesday, February 25, 2014 2:23:49 PM UTC-7, Joe Buty wrote:
>
> Hello, I am having trouble getting Django to work. I have installed python 
> and downloaded and unzipped the .tar file for django. I am using windows 8 
> ugh and can not open the instal file. I read through the setup.py and I 
> think I need help setting the correct path. Either moving the Django unzip 
> folder or declare where it is. 
>
> If any one can offer me advice or even just describe how they got Django 
> to work, whether its on Win8 or something more useful.
>

Django will run on your machine -- it's a bit of a challenge.  I usually 
switch my dual-boot laptop on to Linux for serious django work, but have it 
set up so that I can maintain the same code on either platform.  Here's 
what you will need:

To get started:...
  You need a copy of a good, general purpose compression/decompression 
utility like 7-zip. <http://www.7-zip.org/>  That will unpack your .tar and 
.gz files.

  A copy of Python.  I recommend installing Python 3.3 because the *Python 
Launcher for Windows* makes life on the command line so much easier -- and 
you will be spending a LOT of time running command line commands.  If you 
want to use Python 2.7, then install both.  The launcher will run Python 2 
by default unless you tell it otherwise.  Try to write your programs in a 
Python 2.7 compatible dialect of Python 3, no matter which Python version 
you use.  Learn how to set environment variables, you will need them.

  Some kind of minimal Python IDE.  IDLE (that comes with Python) is not 
the best.  I like the one that comes with 
pywin32<https://sf.net/projects/pywin32>. 
If you are going to do anything serious on Windows, (os interface, SQL, 
native graphics ...) you need pywin32. Note: it works in 64 bit Windows, 
too, using the same name.

Then, as soon as you decide to start getting serious:...

  You need pip -- even though it is terrible to install on Windows.  See 
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4750806/how-to-install-pip-on-windows

  A good Python IDE.  If you have already purchased Visual Studio, get Python 
tools for Visual Studio <https://pytools.codeplex.com/> which works quite 
well with CPython. Otherwise, try the free version of 
PyCharm<http://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/>. 
I run it on both my Windows machine (free version) and Linux (the boss paid 
for the commercial license on that one.)

  A copy of git <http://git-scm.com/download/win>. It is my least favorite 
distributed source control system, but is the de-facto standard for django 
projects.
  
  virtual env wrapper for 
Windows<https://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenvwrapper-win>to keep your 
different projects from stepping on each other.

 Happy downloading, and good luck in your efforts.
--
VC

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