This is going back a few years, so things could be a lot different
now, but here are the areas we addressed:
- Database performance. We had some Satchmo sites that would spin up
several hundred queries when rendering out a category. Cartridge goes
to great lengths to ensure this never happens. The
On 03/04/2012 06:51 AM, Stephen McDonald wrote:
In conjunction with the Mezzanine 1.0 release, I've also released
Cartridge 0.4. As I mentioned, Cartridge provides a full ecommerce
package for Mezzanine. While Mezzanine is more of a framework for
building sites with any type of content you need
Thank you.
I don't think the dependency will ever go away. It would be like
trying to remove Django as a dependency of Mezzanine. Cartridge
heavily leverages many aspects of Mezzanine.
On Mar 4, 2:16 pm, "uno...@gmail.com" wrote:
> Stephen,
>
> Amazing work with Mezzanine and Cartridge. One que
Yes - behind the project homepage is the entire demo site where anyone
can log in and try it out. I've left debug on so that when people find
errors on it they can submit the traceback easily. It's been really
helpful on the few occasions it has happened.
On Mar 4, 12:55 pm, arshaver wrote:
> Loo
Stephen,
Amazing work with Mezzanine and Cartridge. One question I had for you
- have you considered separating Cartridge from the dependency on
Mezzanine. I think Cartridge adoption will increase quite a lot if the
interdependency is removed. I realize though, that this means more
issues with man
Looks great. One thing... looks like http://mezzanine.jupo.org/ is
running with Debug = True (try http://mezzanine.jupo.org/asdf). Maybe
you're aware, just FYI.
On Mar 3, 3:51 pm, Stephen McDonald wrote:
> Hi Djangonauts,
>
> I'm happy to announce the release of Mezzanine 1.0. Mezzanine is simple
Thanks creecode.
I totally forgot about that! cheers for pointing that out!
Best Regards,
Stanwin Siow
On Mar 3, 2012, at 11:52 PM, creecode wrote:
> def __unicode__ ( self ):
>
> return '%s' % self.pk
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Grou
Hi Djangonauts,
I'm happy to announce the release of Mezzanine 1.0. Mezzanine is simple yet
powerful BSD licensed CMS for building Django powered sites.
Development of Mezzanine and its sister project Cartridge (ecommerce for
Mezzanine) began over two years ago, born from frustrations with the on
That seemed to fix part of the issue, but now I get this message:
Page not found (404)
Request Method: GET
Request URL:http://localhost:8000/accounts/profile/
Using the URLconf defined in coolstuff.urls, Django tried these URL
patterns, in this order:
^coolapp/
The current URL, accounts/profil
On Saturday, March 3, 2012 5:53:54 PM UTC+2, doubtintom wrote:
>
> I want persistent change filter settings in the Django admin app. This
> has been discussed for years, and from some bug/feature tickets, it is
> inferred to be either implemented in SVN or getting close to it. I
> cannot find an
On Saturday, March 3, 2012 12:31:34 PM UTC+2, João Dias de Carvalho Neto
wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> I'm recently diving into Django framework and a doubt is flashing my head.
>
> If I want to develop and to deploy cloud web applications, each customer
> will have your singular database. In the Django appr
have a look at file and see if it looks ok.
I find I have to dump a model at a time and load them back in a sensible
sequence.
Connected by MOTOBLUR™
-Original message-
From: Vincent Bastos
To: django-users@googlegroups.com
Sent: Sun, 04 Mar 2012, 08:40:07 AEDT
Subject: Importing data
Hi,
I am having trouble importing data using loaddata from a .json file that I
created from a dumpdata export. I have a production application which runs
MySQL on one server and a development machine which runs SQLite. I simple
executed ./manage.py dumpdata > file.json on the production machine
Hello people,
trying to implement a simple "change password" view this came out.
What's the best way to destroy session information for a user?
For example consider when the user changes its password. All session
data should be destroyed.
Thanks!
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You received this message because you are s
I have a Django site in production with Apache and WSGI. Today, the site hit
several errors exactly like the one below. When I tried the same URLs that
caused the errors, they worked fine. I've hit memory errors with this site
before, but never anything like this. Has anyone else seen this sort
Hello guys,
I have an Order model, that has an origin PointField and a range
IntegerField. Furthermore, there is an UserProfile model, which has a
geo_location PointField. Now, I have an User instance, user. I want to
select all Orders, whose distance between Order.origin and
user.userprofile
I want persistent change filter settings in the Django admin app. This
has been discussed for years, and from some bug/feature tickets, it is
inferred to be either implemented in SVN or getting close to it. I
cannot find any documentation on it, although I'm still looking.
Anyone have any knowledge
Hello Stanwin,
On Friday, March 2, 2012 10:05:32 PM UTC-8, St@n wrote:
Hello,
>
> I was just tidying up on my project when i discovered a small bug.
>
> the last one being a queryset.
>
> *So the forms.py looks like this:*
>
> keywords =
> forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(queryset=Keyword.obj
On Friday, March 2, 2012 8:48:57 PM UTC-8, Russell Keith-Magee wrote:
Seriously -- Django is good at what it does, but just because you've got a
> really good hammer, it doesn't mean every problem is a nail. The task you
> describe sounds like almost exactly what cron scripts are designed to
>
Hi
I'm recently diving into Django framework and a doubt is flashing my head.
If I want to develop and to deploy cloud web applications, each customer
will have your singular database. In the Django approach, The database
configurations are in the settings.py file. How can I do to separate a
s
Hi Jonas,
I am having exactly the same problem in one of my projects and I am not
sure why. Did you manage to solve it in the end?
Would appreciate it if you could share with me your solution if you did.
Regards,
Calvin
On Saturday, December 24, 2011 10:51:27 PM UTC+8, jonas wrote:
>
> Hell
On Saturday, 3 March 2012 10:21:39 UTC, leaks wrote:
>
> How do you use a link as a post request?
> this is a thing that I have never done before... maybe use it inside a
> form?
> I searched and didn't find anything similar in django...
>
> Thanks in advance!
>
You can't. A link is a GET, by d
How do you use a link as a post request?
this is a thing that I have never done before... maybe use it inside a form?
I searched and didn't find anything similar in django...
Thanks in advance!
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"Django users" group.
is proxy_send_timeout too small ?
I newer
2012/3/3 赵帅
> I suggest you do a pressure test on the url that have triggered the
> problem to see whether it will show up again.If yes, to see the system
> status such as the number of sockets being used and the number of
> connections from nginx to fa
> You'll have to add another loop for the hours if you want more than just
> 12:xx.
Actually, after I hit send, I was sort of curious about how to handle
the hours if you cross over from a.m. to p.m., but you just have add
another range to the comprehension, and use 24-hour format in the hour
ran
On Mar 3, 12:54 am, Scott Macri wrote:
> OK, I guess a better question is how do I switch my time outputs using
> datetime.time from 24-hour clock to 12-hour clock so I can use am/pm?
>
I think this will work for what you need:
>>> import datetime
>>> TIME_CHOICES = [(datetime.time(12, min), dat
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