UPDATE: Well I added django-admin.py to my PATH and I still get an error message:
python: cannot open 'django-admin.py' : [Errno 2] No such file to directory On Aug 15, 11:30 am, CLIFFORD ILKAY <clifford_il...@dinamis.com> wrote: > On 15/08/09 01:43 PM, Thiago511 wrote: > > > mark how do I add a file to %PATH% ? > > This isn't a Django issue so much as a (very basic) system > administration issue. I suggest you read about the PATH environment > variable and grasp that instead of blindly following someone else's > instructions about how to do something as simple as adding something to > the PATH. This isn't something that started with Vista. It dates back to > the earliest days of DOS so there are plenty of resources on the web > explaining this. Better yet, you should strive for understanding of > environment variables in general. If you fixate on PATH alone and don't > understand what an environment variable is, you'll have difficulties > with PYTHONPATH as well. > > Once you understand these concepts, they're universally-applicable, with > minor variations, to DOS/Windows, OS X, Linux, and a host of other > operating systems. When you decide to deploy your completed Django > project on the server of a hosting provider, in all likelihood, that > server won't be running Windows anyway so it helps to develop this > understanding. > > One of our Django hosting clients asked why he was getting import errors > for Reportlab on our VPS when he wasn't on his local development > environment. He suspected it was because Reportlab wasn't installed. He > was right. We replied to him: > > "We've installed: > > python-reportlab - ReportLab library to create PDF documents using Python > > python-reportlab-accel - C coded extension accelerator for the ReportLab > Toolkit > > For future reference, you don't necessarily have to wait for us to > install Python libraries into the global Python site-packages. You could > install the Python libraries somewhere in your home directory and put > that directory in PYTHONPATH, as you did with Django itself." > > He replied: > > "Thanks for that. I should have realised I have access to the Python > installation." > > In response, we replied: > > "You don't have access to the Python installation in /usr/lib/python. > You have access to your home directory into which you can put Python > libraries and add to PYTHONPATH. There is a big difference. The former > is global. The latter can be different even on a per project basis so I > hesitate to say it's local. If you build another Django project for > another client, nothing stops you from having a different PYTHONPATH for > that project. In fact, we do exactly that because we may have different > versions of Django, or other Python libraries on which we depend, for > each project." > > If you understood what I wrote above, you may be wondering, "How can you > have a different PYTHONPATH for each application?" The excerpt below > from the shell script that we use to start|stop|restart the fcgi(*) will > illustrate. > > PROJDIR="/home/someuser/projects/someproject/" > PYTHONPATH="/home/someuser/django/:/home/someuser/:/home/someuser/lib/" > > /usr/bin/python $PROJDIR/manage.py runfcgi umask=000 pidfile=$PIDFILE > socket=$SOCKET method=$METHOD --pythonpath=$PYTHONPATH > > (Watch the line wrapping above. Everything from /usr/bin to PYTHONPATH > below it is on one line.) > > (*) The above is for deployment via fcgi using the nginx web server. > -- > Regards, > > Clifford Ilkay > Dinamis > 1419-3266 Yonge St. > Toronto, ON > Canada M4N 3P6 > > <http://dinamis.com> > +1 416-410-3326 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django users" group. To post to this group, send email to django-users@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to django-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---