Hi Bruno,
Hi Alex,

thank you very much for your helpful responses.
I will do as you suggested and use RequestContext as it is supposed to
be used or via Alex' generic view trick.

Best Regards,

Jesaja Everling

On Feb 25, 3:27 pm, Alex Robbins <alexander.j.robb...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> If you get tired of forgetting to add theRequestContextyou can use
> direct_to_template[1] instead. (I almost always forget it the first
> time)
>
> It is almost exactly like render_to_response, you'd use it like this:
>
> def index(request):
>     return direct_to_template(request, 'index.html', {
>         'extra_context_var': value,
>         })
>
> Alex
>
> [1]http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/generic-views/#django-views-...
>
> On Feb 24, 6:00 am, Jesaja Everling <jeverl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi all!
>
> > Is there any difference between these two ways of using
> >RequestContext?
> > I'm asking because I usually use the first approach, but I want to
> > make sure that there are no subtle differences.
>
> > 1)
> > def index(request):
> >     return render_to_response('index.html',
> >                              RequestContext(request,
> >                                              {}
> >                                              ))
>
> > 2)
> > def index(request):
> >     return render_to_response('index.html',
> >                              {},
> >                              context_instance=
> >RequestContext(request))
>
> > Thanks!
>
> > Jesaja Everling

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