Do you know if there's an easy way to try and figure out where
reverse( ) is looking for the pages?

On Oct 17, 11:24 am, dkadish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nope. Tried that.
>
> This shouldn't (I don't think) make any difference but I am running
> Django 1.0, Python 2.5, Apache 2.210 on Windows Server 2003 with SQL
> Server 2005 as the db (I know, I know...out of my hands)
>
> David
>
> On Oct 17, 11:19 am, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > dkadish wrote:
> > > I'm having issues with a named URL pattern in my code. Django does not
> > > seem to be finding the correct URL when the {% url %} and reverse( )
> > > tag/functions are used.
>
> > > the urls.py file at app_root/project/urls.py contains:
>
> > > from django.views.generic import list_detail, create_update
> > > from maverick.project.models import Project
> > > from django.conf.urls.defaults import patterns, url
> > > from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
>
> > > urlpatterns = patterns('maverick.project.views',
> > >     url(r'^$', list_detail.object_list, {'queryset':
> > > Project.objects.all()}, 'project-home'),
> > >     url(r'^new$', create_update.create_object, {'model': Project,
> > > 'post_save_redirect': reverse('project-home')}, 'project-new'),
> > > )
>
> > > and I am referencing the URL pattern (in addition to in the second
> > > link) in the file app_root/home/templates/base.html:
>
> > > <html>
> > >    <head>
> > >            <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/site_media/
> > > maverick.css">
> > >            <title>Maverick</title>
> > >    </head>
> > >    <body>
> > >            <div id="nav">
> > >                    <a href="{% url project-home %}">Projects</a>
> > >                    <a href="{% url calibration-home %}">Calibrations</a>
> > >            </div>
> > >            <div id="menu">
> > >                    {% block section_menu %}{% endblock %}
> > >            </div>
> > >            <div id="content">
> > >                    {% block content %}{% endblock %}
> > >            </div>
> > >            <div id="footer">
> > >                    {% block footer %}{% endblock %}
> > >            </div>
> > >    </body>
> > > </html>
>
> > > If you need more information, just let me know what to post.
>
> > Looks like it should work. Does it make any difference if you change the
> > minus signs to underscores?
>
> > regards
> >  Steve
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