tl:dr -- How do I explicitly render the fields in a form that's passed to
the context dictionary within an object?
I'm building a page right now that shows a list of documents to the user.
Each document has a type, a status, a list of images associated with it,
and finally a document update fo
I don't know if I'm off target but.
I'm presently work on something like this where I have have to save three
models at a go. One model is a stand alone while the other two have a
foreign key to the stand alone model which is a many to one relationship.
So to implement the many to one where I
>
> Sorry if this question seems basic, but I'm having trouble figuring out
> the best way to approach this on a high level.
>
> I'm at the beginning stages of building an ecommerce site,. Inventory
> changes regularly, and photos and descriptions need to be easy to update
> for my client. Is this
Are you sure you are adding your new migrations to your source control? It
sounds like the model changes are being correctly commited but the
generated migrations are not.
On Friday, April 8, 2016 at 11:17:16 AM UTC-5, Neto wrote:
>
> I know, but in production is showing the message that I have
I don't think so... The line I am getting hung up on is:
class Project(models.Model):
..
def approved_projects():
return Project.objects.filter(approved=True)
It seems that no matter how many things I remove from my URLs, if there is
any reference to any model on the first build,
I know, but in production is showing the message that I have to do
makemigrations.
I need a command to know what models need to makemigrations
Em quinta-feira, 7 de abril de 2016 14:50:54 UTC-3, Daniel Roseman escreveu:
>
> You shouldn't ever need to make migrations in production. You make them i
I need to build a pretty complex / non-standard form and am looking for
advice on the overall architecture. Consider the following models:
class UserProfile(User):
... standard set of fields
class ProfileExtra():
ForeignKey(UserProfile)
extratype (e.g. skill, work experience, website, pub
Python/Django programmers,
What code review tools do you use? Do you run them automatically
when checking in new code? Do you recommend them?
Details:
I'm working on a large Python/Django Web app (1,000 files, 200,000
lines of code, 3.5 years) and spe
The ability to update a profile can be as simple as a form for the model
object that holds the profile. The company's employees would have access to
Django admin. I've never used it personally, but django-user-accounts looks
like a way to avoid making a registration form if that's important to you.
Hi,
Sorry if this question seems basic, but I'm having trouble figuring out the
best way to approach this on a high level.
I'm at the beginning stages of building an ecommerce site,. Inventory
changes regularly, and photos and descriptions need to be easy to update
for my client. Is this an a
I'm making a Django site for a company, and the way I envision it working
is this:
The company's employees can manage and validate clients who sign up on the
site as well as link them to other services.
Once the clients login, they have their own little control panel where they
can change their
I'm making a Django website for a company, where the company's employees
will validate clients that sign up.
I'm thinking that the clients should have a mini control panel where they
can change their own information only, while the company's employees have
their own control panel where they can
Admin site is a great example of how to do that. But in general you can
use in the view
if not request.user.has_perm("app name.perm name):
Raise error like 404 or redirect to login
I think decorator is provide by django.
El jueves, 7 de abril de 2016, Larry Martell
escribió:
> On Thu,
I am creating a Django app for which I want to be able to approve users
before letting them login to the site. Am using django-user-accounts from
pinax for the same. This approval step requires users to submit additional
information such as their qualifications etc. This information should be
a
Difficult for me to say for sure without having a sample project to debug.
Do you know if you have any module level queries in your project? Those are
generally to be avoided and may cause problems like this. See
https://groups.google.com/d/topic/django-developers/7JwWatLfP44/discussion
for som
Sent too soon!
def calculate_score(self):
return
x.m2m_set.filter(condition).aggregate(avg=Avg('m2m_subfield__score'))['avg']
returns the "Relation fields do not support nested lookups" error
On Fri, Apr 8, 2016 at 11:27 AM, Jonty Needham
wrote:
> I'm not sure what this error means or how
I'm not sure what this error means or how to resolve it. I'm guessing it's
because in my model I'm trying to assign a field to the value of the
average of all the many2many's from another field. But I can do this at the
command line happily, yet when I put it on a submethod I can't do it, so I
don'
Under Django 1.9.5 and admin I'm developping an application "myapp" of which
below you can see a simplified complete version.
Focusing on the OrderOption ModelAdmin its inline OrderDetailinline has a
raw_id_field related to the model Item. Now, when I click on the magnifying
lens close to t
It shouldn't. Are you sure you haven't opened and saved the json file with
a text editor that might be adding the BOM, e.g. Notepad before running
loaddata?
On Apr 7, 2016 9:17 PM, wrote:
> Opening the JSON file in Notepad++ certainly gives some insight... It says
> it's encoded in USC-2 LE BOM.
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