On Sun, 2006-05-11 at 14:27 -0600, Adrian Holovaty wrote:
> On 11/5/06, Matt Culbreth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > So, based on this, my initial leaning had been to go to TurboGears. My
> > thoughts were that the application is not interested in content
> > management or display, and that I'd l
If I create a new instance of a database object from a view, this item
appears fine in the database and even in the changelist view of the
admin, but clicking on the item ( as if going to delete or edit it )
just gets a template error. Anyone know why this is?
Ie in the the view method we have
h
I do this kind of thing a lot, and find it's much much easier to have
MySQL on both machines and use mysqldump. A big advantage of two mysql
specific installs is that you can use mysqldump with the field name
option and it will still work fine even if you are changing models. I
write little bash s
On Fri, 2006-03-11 at 13:17 +, elake wrote:
> Thanks. Thats what I thought. I think that we are going to put up a
> site that is all from a WYSIWYG and in the background I am going to
> work on a Django powered site. Would you recommend Postgres over MySQL
> or the other way around?
I think t
> I am working with a small team to create a new web site for our
> church.
> We have found a site (http://www.prestonwood.org) that we would like
> to
> use as a model and I am wondering if django is the right tool for the
> job. I looked at other django powered sites (http://www.ljworld.com/,
>
Wondering if there exists somewhere some documentation listing *all* of
the template variables available in the various admin views. If not, I
think such a thing would be really really useful.
Thanks
Iain
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because y
On Tue, 2006-31-10 at 20:19 -0600, James Bennett wrote:
> On 10/31/06, iain duncan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I would like to change the template ( or change behaviour ) for the
> > change list view, but only for one model. Can anyone tell me how one
> > could fin
> When Django renders the list, it looks for the following templates, in
> order, and uses the first one it finds:
>
> admin/appname/modelname/change_list.html
> admin/appname/change_list.html
> admin/change_list.html
>
> Where 'appname' and 'modelname' are the names of the application and
> th
On Tue, 2006-31-10 at 20:19 -0600, James Bennett wrote:
> On 10/31/06, iain duncan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I would like to change the template ( or change behaviour ) for the
> > change list view, but only for one model. Can anyone tell me how one
> > could fin
I would like to change the template ( or change behaviour ) for the
change list view, but only for one model. Can anyone tell me how one
could find out in the template which model we are representing? Or
alternately, where in the admin code one might add extra variables to
render to the template?
Hi folks, I would like to add a custom form button to the admin
interface somehow and am not sure how to go about it.
I want to add a "download now" button the list view for some file
entries, so it needs to be a link to file. Any idea how this should be
done?
Thanks
Iain
--~--~-~--~
Just wondering if anyone has any recos for best
toolkit/library/widget/approach to adding dynamic pull down menus to a
Django app. I am leaning towards using mochikit and dojo whenever
possible because of their adoption by python frameworks, but I am also
happy to use whatever fits. Lost in the se
I have not dug into either Dojo or Mochikit yet and am wondering if one
is more suited to Django dev than the other for adding AJAX type bells
and whistles. Pros and Cons of either?
Thanks
Iain
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subsc
On Sun, 2006-15-10 at 08:20 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ian,
>
> First off congrats on the project and your good sense to do it in
> Django. :) I've not used Python CGI but I presume it follows the
> standard cgi model of having to launch a new process for each request.
> This will craw
I just landed a job for a python CMS and custom shopping cart, but
unfortunately the client has recently purchased 5 years of hosting from
GoDaddy. Go Daddy says it supports Python CGI.
He is prepared to switch hosts and bite the cost if need be, but
obviously would prefer not to. Can anyone on
I got some previous advice on overriding how the admin does delete which
was pretty straightforward as it does just uses a url. The Save button
doesn't seem to work that way.
I would like to save a file name not as it is given, but in an altered
format based on another field, so before the file g
Has anyone got this working? Or any other way of ordering items in the
admin interface by foreign key? I get error messages in the admin
interface with the example below, as far as I can tell it is like the
manual.
Example from manual:
class Answer(models.Model):
question = models.ForeignKey
On Sun, 2006-08-10 at 21:39 -0500, James Bennett wrote:
> On 10/8/06, iain duncan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > - the python interface for gvim ( allows running a python interpreter
> > within vim that can in turn call methods on the vim buffers ).
>
> Hooray for
>
> > It's got all the "standard" features: syntax highlighting,
> > indentation, etc., but it's also got so much more. The
> > text-manipulation things it can do run circles around everything else,
> > it's got support for Subversion and WebDAV, it has an insanely
> > powerful editing file brow
On Fri, 2006-29-09 at 12:14 -0700, alex kessinger wrote:
> http://satchmo.python-hosting.com/
>
> is an attempt to make an ecommerce site using django
Wicked cool. I'll subscribe. When do we get name something Lester or
Prez? Guess I'd have to invent it. ;)
Thanks
Iain
Oh yeah, to the Satchmo
Hi everyone. I've done a couple of few django CMS sites now and have in
the past done a complete custom ecommerce-cms-order tracking system in
php. Now I have a client that I would like to use Django with and they
need a simple but customized shopping cart system. Wondering what folks
are using to
On Tue, 2006-26-09 at 07:50 +0530, Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
>
> On 26-Sep-06, at 2:20 AM, Julio Nobrega wrote:
>
> > committed, and learn 2 programming languages, Javascript and Python,
> > plus HTML.
>
> and SQL and CSS
If you are new to coding, I would suggest that you focus on the python
st
On Mon, 2006-25-09 at 20:44 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Well Iain perhaps I should shut up and try it first!
>
> I've set up a laptop to try a clean install of python without
> corrupting my current webdev setup.
If you're willing to try it, more power to you! I'd recommend picking up
a co
On Mon, 2006-25-09 at 20:20 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ok,
>
> I decided that I don't want to spend $1,000s on other people coding my
> databases etc so I thought Django looked pretty good. I read some of
> the code and it seems pretty intuitive (with a lot of hard work!)
>
> Now my probl
On Mon, 2006-25-09 at 03:01 -0400, David Sissitka wrote:
> With a VPS you could install mod_python, either building Apache with it or by
> loading it dynamically. For more information, see the documentation:
>
> http://www.modpython.org/live/current/doc-html/installation.html
>
> I know for a f
On Sun, 2006-24-09 at 23:18 -0400, David Sissitka wrote:
> I am a WebFaction customer, definitely not a bad company. A few
> thoughts about WebFaction:
>
> 1) It's a one man show, at least, support is. Support ticket response
> times are anywhere from three hours to a day and a half.
> 2) The co
I know this has been asked many times, but as new hosting solutions pop
up continually, just wanted to check on recommendations for good fast
shared hosting that is Django friendly and reliable for business
clients.
Thanks
Iain
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received
Hello fellow djangoers. I've been doing a gallery site that is too image
heavy for it's own good ( yes, I'm subcontracted by a graphic designer
... ), and am trying to find good ways to control image loading so that
the user will wait and then see all the numerous and large images at the
same time
carlito556 wrote:
> Free video of the Jenna Jameson
>
> at http://www.rosapink.net
Jenna Jameson and Django Reindhardt, who knew?
Those jazz players are always trouble ... ; )
Iain
"I'm all in favour of grants for jazz musicians. Or any other brand of
scotch" -- Eddie Condon
--~--~-~
Andy Dustman wrote:
> On 7/14/06, Jacob Kaplan-Moss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>On Jul 14, 2006, at 1:18 PM, Adrian Holovaty wrote:
>>
>>>Some folks benchmarked Symfony, Ruby on Rails and Django. Django was
>>>the fastest.
>>
>>By over 30% -- hell yeah!
>>
>>Now, I've always known in my gut
> Now my only remaining hurdle ( db migration was surprisingly easy! ) is
> those admin media files. I notice you have
>
> alias /media/ /home2/bmg/django/django/contrib/admin/media/
>
> and that you have loaded the alias module from
> loadmodule alias_module /etc/httpd/modules/mod_alias.so
>
> in your apache config do something similar to
> http://svn.zyons.python-hosting.com/trunk/zilbo/conf/zyons.conf.tmpl
>
> and that will let the apache handle the 'images' area of your site
> instead of django.
>
> On 14/07/2006, at 12:02 PM, Iain Duncan wrote
I'm setting up a sight on webfaction, and so far things are coming along
ok, but I can't figure out how to serve images. I've never used a shared
hosting setup that didn't have a directory called 'public' or 'htdocs'.
Has anyone on here used them? Any tips on where I need to put media and
what I n
Good read Ian, thanks for the post.
Iain
Ian Maurer wrote:
> IBM has published the 2nd part in my two-part series on Web
> Development frameworks.
>
> http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-turbogears/
>
> Also, at the end of this article I include my comparison of the 2
> frame
Can anyone tell me if it's possible to limit which entries within a
given table can be edited in the admin?
I've made a client user account that can only edit certain models, but I
would also like to make sure within those model/tables there are some
entries that they can't change. ( ie no deleti
> Design-to-code process (HTML/CSS mostly): Designing With Web Standards
> http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321385551
Amazon and Indigo both say "customers also bought"
"Web Standards Solutions: The Markup and Style Handbook (Pioneering
Series)" by Dan Cederholm
Any opinions on that? Or on
"Cas
> They do also offer business-level accounts with SLA-style guarantees
> on uptime, though, and common sense would recommend going that route
> if it's what you really need.. I've always marveled at the number of
> people out there who claim to have "mission-critical" sites but are
> unwilling to
Ian Holsman wrote:
> congrats Sandro.
> it looks great.
>
> I'd be interested to hear what you (and others) think were the
> biggest obstacles you had and how you overcame them.
>
> regards
> Ian
Yeah, that's one of the nicest layouts I've seen (IMO) for an info-rich
site. Especially like t
>>how many other hosting providers are here ;-)
>
>
> I don't have any formal connection with them, but TextDrive
> (http://textdrive.com/) is fairly Django-friendly by nature, and I
> wrote a (now slightly outdated, but I'll be updating it soon) manual
> for deployment there: http://manuals.te
Jay Parlar wrote:
> Probably WebFaction (formerly python-hosting.com) would be your best
> bet: http://www.webfaction.com/shared_hosting
That looks sweet. Anyone else have any feedback on these guys?
Iain
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because
>>Do most shared hosting providers allow one to do that? I would have
>>thought not
>
>
> not - unless you are on vps hosting with root access, mod_python is
> not an option unless your provider is kind enough to restart apache
> regularly with a cron job - even that may not be enough
> One of the big advantages of MySQL is ease of use and a choice when it comes
> to how you store data. For example: if you need fast reads and less updates,
> make your table MyISAM (you can even compress it making it smaller and
> faster!). If you need high availability of your data, you can
Wade Leftwich wrote:
> Iain Duncan wrote:
>
>>>>how do you handle changes on a site which is already online (talking
>>>>about changing models and/or views)?
>>>
>>>
>>>I typically maintain a duplicate setup on a testing machine
I'm new to Django, but have a project done that must go up live next
week for a client. However, it's just glamorized brochure ware with and
admin interface, so they likely want to use shared hosting. Can anyone
tell me:
- Recomendations for reliable shared hosting that is Django friendly
with se
>>how do you handle changes on a site which is already online (talking
>>about changing models and/or views)?
>
>
> I typically maintain a duplicate setup on a testing machine (in my
> case, a laptop running Linux) and use that for development and
> testing, then when I know I've got the bugs w
>>As a part of the application I'm writing I need to do certain things to
>
> the database every night. The easiest way to implement this would be a
> python script run every night by cron.
>
> Set env DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE setting for the script. Then just use
> your models and template as yo
>>Ok, so we're would be smart place to do housekeeping you want to have
>>happen no matter what page is loaded?
>
>
> Middleware: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/middleware/
>
> You can have functions that run prior to a request being passed along,
> prior to a view function being
> Separate client hits might hit separate Python interpreter instances,
> and each of those instances will have imported the global namespace on
> their own, creating separate global namespaces.
>
> So like Steven said, it's not safe to do anything in the global
> namespace. If you need a per-ses
> Code in the global namespace is executed at module import time.
> These variables live as long as the python interpreter runs. (at least
> thats my understanding of it)
>
> This is great for constants and such, but you can't rely on it to store
> state variables as, depending on the environm
>>This feels more like a problem to be solved at the database level; the
>>ideal solution would be to set 'ON DELETE SET NULL' for the
>>foreign-key column (assuming -- and I don't know if this is the case
>>-- that Django is doing 'ON DELETE CASCADE'). Just make sure that
>>column will accept NU
>>foo = models.ForeignKey( bar, null=True, blank=True )
>
>
> Give this one a go again. This is the form that should work. Perhaps
> there was another problem that got in the way? BTW there is nothing
> wrong with using a null field for your foreign key relationship in most
> schemas, from a pra
One of my very few gripes with the otherwise amazing admin interface is
the way deletions are handled when foreign key relationships are there.
If you want to delete one item, it takes out any others depending on
this item. Makes sense in a way, but could be very dangerous in the
hands of a client
I stumbled on some behaviour that I'm sure is explained somewhere but
not in the tutorials so I haven't found it.
I made a global log object for debugging. I noticed instantiating
objects in the view global name space executes before anything else in
the views module on page load, very useful for
>>Well... Mod_python is the easiest method of running django, FastCGI
>>setup is more advanced and usually requires basic knowledge about
>>forking vs. threading, writing init scripts etc. These are things that
>>makes it harder for beginners to understand Django itself so in my
>>opinion it's go
In addition, I checked my mysql table and the field in question is
implemented as an integer with Null allowed and default set to Null, so
it appears that syncdb is creating the table properly, but the admin
interface is not letting me put in a null value for some reason.
Thanks
Iain
Iain
The Django sites related-objects documentation says:
"if a ForeignKey field has null=True set (i.e., it allows NULL values),
you can assign None to it. Example:
e = Entry.objects.get(id=2)
e.blog = None
e.save() # "UPDATE blog_entry SET blog_id = NULL ...;"
But I can't figure out how to set it
> There already is one:
> http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki
>
> Doesn't contain many full tutorials though.
Ah oops, I've been there and didn't even realize it was a wiki! Could
certainly do with more fleshed out tutorials on set up and such. Perhaps
I will find time to contribute after my cur
What about a Django wiki for tutorial type things? Gentoo has one that
has been enormously useful to me and could serve well as a model.
Iain
James Bennett wrote:
> One of the great things about Django is that there are lots of people
> out there motivated to write about it and share things they
> which would indicate that Gentoo's stable mod_python still isn't new
> enough, odd as that sounds. It's only one patchlevel higher than
> Sarge's version.
>
>
>>...My home dev box is
>>gentoo, all I had to do was emerge mod_python and the mysqldb e-build (
>>can't remember name ), checkout
> Hi, I was looking at trying Django for a project and noticed that in the
> comments to the installation directions it was claimed that Debian
> Sarge's mod_python isn't recent enough to run Django. That would be a
> big complication. Is anyone running Django on Sarge, and can anyone
> confirm
Anyone have good recomendations for a canadian hosting company that
makes setting up Django sites easy? Will pay higher prices for good
service and stability.
Thanks
Iain
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Grou
61 matches
Mail list logo