>
> @James: Sorry, I misspoke! [field] actually corresponds to a old field in
>> state X. Before adding the new fields in state Y, the migration is trying
>> to remove some old fields in state X but isn't finding them. I think this
>> means that I'm unable to re-run that migration since it's lookin
On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 3:37 PM, Daniel Chen wrote:
> @Mike: I'm using Python 2.7.10 and Django 1.7. I'm not sure the ticket
> applies, but I appreciate the link!
>
> @James: Sorry, I misspoke! [field] actually corresponds to a old field in
> state X. Before adding the new fields in state Y, the m
On 3/10/2015 8:35 AM, Daniel Chen wrote:
My confusion is in the fact that the model state wouldn't roll back to
state X after the first failed transaction (like the DB did).
No. The model is all your own work. Anything you write stays written.
The migration system tries to implement your work.
@Mike: I'm using Python 2.7.10 and Django 1.7. I'm not sure the ticket
applies, but I appreciate the link!
@James: Sorry, I misspoke! [field] actually corresponds to a old field in
state X. Before adding the new fields in state Y, the migration is trying
to remove some old fields in state X but
@Mike: I'm using Python 2.7.10 and Django 1.7. I'm not sure the ticket
applies, but I appreciate the link!
@James: Sorry, I misspoke! [field] actually corresponds to a old field in
state X. Before adding the new fields in state Y, the migration is trying
to remove some old fields in state X but
Also it is most likely inconsistent if the user has the same webpage opened
on two different tabs
On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 5:55 PM, Andreas Kuhne
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I don't think you can reliably do that. Django never knows when the user
> closes his browser window. Because a session is stateless (t
>
> From what ive seen when i use it its like django admin but with more
> features.
>
Django Admin is not an API, nor can it be used that way. If you need API
functionality, you would write the interface yourself, or use a package
such as DRF.
DRF and the Django Admin perform the same functional
Thanks for the replies. Carsten - that link is broken for me unfortunately.
Thanks for the thumbs up Simon - appreciate the help. I'll be sure to
document this once I have a moment. I have one follow up question. Both so
I can see the proof in the pudding myself and because I'm generally curious
Hi,
I don't think you can reliably do that. Django never knows when the user
closes his browser window. Because a session is stateless (there is only a
connection to the server when it responds to a request). However you could
do this via a bit of ajax or a pretty unreliable javascript event.
Wha
Hi Robert,
The main reason for using django rest framework is if you need a backend to
communicate with one or more rich frontends. An example could be if you
have a website running django and you want to create a mobile application
for iOS or android. You can then create an API that will communic
when ive used this method ive experience errors the port 587 seems to have
issues.
could you post some basic code. that would work
for anybody
please thanks
email me back
djangocharm2...@gmail.com thanks
On Monday, September 28, 2015 at 5:56:42 PM UTC-5, Rajat Singh wrote:
>
> I want to kno
>From what ive seen when i use it its like django admin but with more
features.
I also noticed that it has the serializers are those for like using it with
a machine ot translatign code?
I also have question on why its needed i understand that the api is for
client and users to collect data is
Want to know how and where can I implement a method in Django which is
to called automatically only when a session end ( i.e. when user close
the webapp or browser ). I want to know where that method should be
written, how to call it automatically after end of session.
I want to use this method t
add foreign key in model, not in database, but it can cause conflicts with
django.
anyway if you even want to do it reviews the documentation SQLite
2015-09-30 13:12 GMT-03:00 Gergely Polonkai :
> Assuming you are using Django and it's ORM, the same way as in any other
> database:
>
> fieldname =
Please have a look at the aggregation docs and see if you can figure it out:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/topics/db/aggregation/
On Friday, October 2, 2015 at 2:46:39 AM UTC-4, Bhanu Kathuria wrote:
>
> I have attached my model files and template files. Please tell how can i
> find a
I am a beginner, and working on my first django based project - a wevsite with
CMS for Online News Paper.
Dear expert kindly suggest me with:
1. Structure
2. How to use portlets
3. Extending django admin , etc
Thanks in advance
-Milind
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