be aware that you also have to define app_label = "myapp" for every
model when using the admin-interface.

patrick.


On Oct 25, 12:13 pm, TiNo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> They are just normal python files. So you could just create a 'models'
> folder and within it an __init__.py.
> so:
>
> - app
> -- models
> --- __init__.py
> --- stocks.py
> etc.
>
> # __init__.py
> from stocks import StockModel
> from customers import CustomerModel
> etc.
>
> Now you can still use the same import commands as before, and syncdb should
> be able to find them as well.
>
> TiNo
>
> On Sat, Oct 25, 2008 at 11:35 AM, Low Kian Seong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
>
>
> > I am trying to build an app in django which has a few components:
>
> > 1. Stocks
> > 2. Customers and
> > 3. Sales
>
> > I noticed that my models.py is getting huge and unwieldy. I tried
> > digging around but could not find anything good but is there a guide
> > on properly breaking a huges models.py into smaller chunks of files?
>
> > Thank you in advance.
>
> > lowks aat sqci.biz
>
>
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