https://wsvincent.com/about/
> Op 5 aug. 2018, om 17:20 heeft Jun Chen het volgende
> geschreven:
>
> Does anyone know a good django book for the Django 2.0?
>
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Does anyone know a good django book for the Django 2.0?
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g if anyone else has ever read this particulkar Django
> book called "Sams Teach Yourself Django in 24 Hours" I checked out of the
> library yesterday? [yeah I know it's one of the "24 hours" series] Does it
> really teach the beginner a lot of things concerning D
dvanced user, but I found the book simplistic and not
>>> worth it. Django's own documentation is much better
>>> https://docs.djangoproject.com
>>>
>>> On Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:35:16 UTC+1, Steve Burrus wrote:
>>>>
>>>> * Sa
gt; On Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:35:16 UTC+1, Steve Burrus wrote:
>>>
>>> * Say I was wondering if anyone else has ever read this particulkar
>>> Django book called "Sams Teach Yourself Django in 24 Hours" I checked out
>>> of the library yesterday? [y
ot worth
> it. Django's own documentation is much better
> https://docs.djangoproject.com
>
> On Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:35:16 UTC+1, Steve Burrus wrote:
>>
>> * Say I was wondering if anyone else has ever read this particulkar
>> Django book called "Sams
I'm no way an advanced user, but I found the book simplistic and not worth
it. Django's own documentation is much
better https://docs.djangoproject.com
On Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:35:16 UTC+1, Steve Burrus wrote:
>
> * Say I was wondering if anyone else has ever read this pa
* Say I was wondering if anyone else has ever read this particulkar Django
book called "Sams Teach Yourself Django in 24 Hours" I checked out of the
library yesterday? [yeah I know it's one of the "24 hours" series] Does it
really teach the beginner a lot of
On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 1:42 AM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Nov 2013 11:11:06 +0200, voger
> declaimed the following:
>
> >> The Django Book is written in using Sphinx. Sphinx is a tool you can
> >> install from PyPI --
> >>
> >> pip in
On 11/10/2013 12:57 AM, Russell Keith-Magee wrote:
On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 12:05 AM, voger mailto:vogernewslett...@yahoo.gr>> wrote:
The django book was my first contact with django but as the website
itself states it is way out of date (covering django 1.0 and
mentioning he
On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 12:05 AM, voger wrote:
> The django book was my first contact with django but as the website itself
> states it is way out of date (covering django 1.0 and mentioning here and
> there 1.4). The same website suggests their github page
>
> https://gith
The django book was my first contact with django but as the website
itself states it is way out of date (covering django 1.0 and mentioning
here and there 1.4). The same website suggests their github page
https://github.com/jacobian/djangobook.com
where the book updates are work in progress
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 5:55 AM, Skip Montanaro wrote:
> book (or tutorials). I'm rummage through the release notes and see what I
> come up with.
>
> Or are new useful features more likely to be found in contributed
> apps/modules? If so, how do I browse that environment? Is there some sort
>
> If you do go through the release notes for 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 and 1.4, you
> shouldn't find *that* many backwards incompatibilities.
>
Thanks. I wasn't actually all that worried about incompatibilities. I was
more worried about interesting new features in later versions which aren't
discussed
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 1:13 AM, Skip Montanaro wrote:
> I was encouraged to see that the Django Book authors had open-sourced the
> book. I cloned the git repo and built it. I've been working my way
> through the online book and thought the open source content might have some
I was encouraged to see that the Django Book authors had open-sourced the
book. I cloned the git repo and built it. I've been working my way
through the online book and thought the open source content might have some
updates, but after comparing a couple chapters (intro and Chapter 11
mber 13, 2012 1:32:30 AM UTC-8, 向浩 wrote:
>
> (r'^time/plus/\d{1,2}/$', hours_ahead),this line,you should use () for
> d{1,2}
> (r'^time/plus/\(d{1,2})/$', hours_ahead)
>
> 在 2011年2月18日星期五UTC+8下午11时04分13秒,Dipo Elegbede写道:
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
(r'^time/plus/\d{1,2}/$', hours_ahead),this line,you should use () for
d{1,2}
(r'^time/plus/\(d{1,2})/$', hours_ahead)
在 2011年2月18日星期五UTC+8下午11时04分13秒,Dipo Elegbede写道:
>
> Hi all,
>
> i am currently reading the django book and following the examples step by
&
While the things on the djangobook are probably still compatible,
they're far of being best practices nowadays, and will lead you down
old and abandoned roads, more times than not.
As it's been said, I'd rather stay by the official docs, they're very
clear and pretty helpful, not purely technical
maybe you must to read djangoprouect.com docs... has a nice and short
tutorial and a very deep documentation of almos every aspect and version of
django.
2012/7/28 Russell Keith-Magee
> Hi
>
> Django has a very strong backwards compatibility policy, so even
> though the book is old, most of the
Hi
Django has a very strong backwards compatibility policy, so even
though the book is old, most of the core functionality should be the
same. There will be *some* differences, though, so if you start seeing
errors, looking for the relevant section in the official documentation
should help point y
On Sat, 2012-07-28 at 03:10 -0700, ACK-Django wrote:
> hi i m new to django and i have installed django1.4
> so can i use this book http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
> but its little old, so people tell me its there any drawback of using
> this book
better to do the tutorial in the docs.
--
rega
hi i m new to django and i have installed django1.4
so can i use this book http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
but its little old, so people tell me its there any drawback of using this
book
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Django Book site in Persian langage launched.
www.djangobook.ir
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dj
On 29-04-12 21:24, knowledge_seeker wrote:
On Friday, April 27, 2012 7:09:32 PM UTC-7, knowledge_seeker wrote:
My Django book (from the university library) said to add the label
"@login_required" to views that I wish to restrict user access on.
Django 1.4 does not
Thanks for the help guys; I am glad the books were not so out of date!
On Friday, April 27, 2012 7:09:32 PM UTC-7, knowledge_seeker wrote:
>
> My Django book (from the university library) said to add the label
> "@login_required" to views that I wish to restrict user acces
rors). I use the pyflakes for vim
plugin <http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2441> and it saves
me from a ton of headaches.
On Sat, Apr 28, 2012 at 2:14 AM, Daniel Roseman wrote:
> Which, of course, is nothing to do with Django versions, and was true even
> when the Django boo
Which, of course, is nothing to do with Django versions, and was true even
when the Django book was new.
On Saturday, 28 April 2012 03:30:26 UTC+1, jondbaker wrote:
>
> You need to import User from django.contrib.auth.models and login_required
> from django.contrib.auth.decorators.
You need to import User from django.contrib.auth.models and login_required from
django.contrib.auth.decorators. Hope this helps.
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 27, 2012, at 8:09 PM, knowledge_seeker
wrote:
> My Django book (from the university library) said to add the label
> "@log
My Django book (from the university library) said to add the label
"@login_required" to views that I wish to restrict user access on.
Django 1.4 does not allow this; obviously the book is dated! Is there
a more modern way to get the same effect?
Similarly, admin does not allow ac
Jani, excellent idea :) The Django Book is a gem(blehh, an egg) that we
can curate. I'm not a very good writer, but I'm sure there are some good
writers in the community. Should we start a separate thread for this?
On Sun, Apr 22, 2012 at 2:02 AM, Reinout van Rees wrote:
> On 1
On 12-04-12 09:44, Timothy Makobu wrote:
The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have found
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
However, it's three years old now. Is the info on it still valid?
Is there a plan to update it?
Well, I'm writing a book on Djan
On Thursday, April 12, 2012 4:39:35 PM UTC+8, Svyatoslav Bulbakha wrote:
>
>
> List of tutorials: https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/Tutorials
>
>
I found this tutorials list is very useful! thanks Svyatoslav.
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"Djang
Btw, you can checkout book as a SVN from
http://djangobook.com/svn/trunk/en/
Maybe we, as a community could import that to bitbucket/github and continue
maintaining it?
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 5:10 PM, Timothy Makobu wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 3:45 PM, Mario Gudelj wrote:
>
>> I follo
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 3:45 PM, Mario Gudelj wrote:
> I followed the book in 1.3 and everything worked. It's the best piece of
> documentation I've come across. Such great narrative, not too detailed but
> detailed enough.
>
>
> Yea. I still read chapters randomly as the author can obviously teac
, Ramiro Morales wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 5:51 AM, Timothy Makobu
> wrote:
> > Mmmm, any dev willing to tell us the final word on this?
>
> There is no relationship between the Django project and the
> Django book apart from the fact that the tw authors are
> so I
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 5:51 AM, Timothy Makobu
wrote:
> Mmmm, any dev willing to tell us the final word on this?
There is no relationship between the Django project and the
Django book apart from the fact that the tw authors are
so I don't think you will get any official word about book
used last year, was installing Ubuntu 10.04 LTS coming
> with, guess Django 1.2 or 1.1 not sure.
> The book was very solid, easy and did not want to back and fort between
> documentation and book.
> After this initial dose of Django book, documentation seemed much more
> easier.
>
>
>
It is valid for Django 1.1. :)
My solution that I used last year, was installing Ubuntu 10.04 LTS
coming with, guess Django 1.2 or 1.1 not sure.
The book was very solid, easy and did not want to back and fort between
documentation and book.
After this initial dose of Django book, documentation
On Thu, 2012-04-12 at 14:10 +0300, Jani Tiainen wrote:
> And apparently authors didn't wanted/had time/whatever reason there
> is
> upgraded documentation along Django.
>
> It would also require lot of upkeeping different versions of books
> (since every version of Django changes/adds something)
I don't remeber the exact details, but Django book is not part of Django
project but separate project.
And apparently authors didn't wanted/had time/whatever reason there is
upgraded documentation along Django.
It would also require lot of upkeeping different versions of books
(s
t;>
>> 2012/4/12 Torsten Bronger
>>
>>> Hallöchen!
>>>
>>> Timothy Makobu writes:
>>>
>>> > The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
>>> > found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
>>>
>&
angoproject.com/wiki/Tutorials
>
>
>
>
> 2012/4/12 Torsten Bronger
>
>> Hallöchen!
>>
>> Timothy Makobu writes:
>>
>> > The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
>> > found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
>>
&
u, Apr 12, 2012 at 11:09 AM, Torsten Bronger <
> bron...@physik.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
>
>> Hallöchen!
>>
>> Timothy Makobu writes:
>>
>> > The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
>> > found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2
bu writes:
>
> > The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
> > found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
>
> All books about Django share the same problem: The original
> documentation is simply terrific, both for the beginner and the
> expert.
>
>
e you a very solid
> footing.
>
> Best,
>
> SB
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 1:09 AM, Torsten Bronger <
> bron...@physik.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
>
>> Hallöchen!
>>
>> Timothy Makobu writes:
>>
>> > The Django book is the best source
Yes it is. But the book has its place. Or is leaving the book outdated an
indirect way of telling us to use only the docs?
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 11:09 AM, Torsten Bronger <
bron...@physik.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
> Hallöchen!
>
> Timothy Makobu writes:
>
> > The Django
12 at 1:09 AM, Torsten Bronger <
bron...@physik.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
> Hallöchen!
>
> Timothy Makobu writes:
>
> > The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
> > found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
>
> All books about Dj
Hallöchen!
Timothy Makobu writes:
> The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have
> found http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
All books about Django share the same problem: The original
documentation is simply terrific, both for the beginner and the
expert.
Tschö,
T
The Django book is the best source of understanding Django I have found
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
However, it's three years old now. Is the info on it still valid?
Is there a plan to update it?
regards,
Tim
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From: hayya...@hotmail.com
To: django-users@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Problem with django book in Forms chapter 7
Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2011 20:11:51 +
Hi just started facing the s
;contact_form.html', {'form': form})
From: hayya...@hotmail.com
To: django-users@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Problem with django book in Forms chapter 7
Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2011 20:11:51 +
Hi just started facing the same problem which you did in chapter 7 . I tried
_FAILURE_VIEW setting.
> Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2011 09:10:36 +0200
> From: rafadurancastan...@gmail.com
> To: django-users@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: Problem with django book in Forms chapter 7
>
> I had the same problem as you, since the book was written using an
/11 23:05, bob gailer wrote:
I love the django book. Until I got to the section "Tying Your First
Form Class".
Problem:-"This class can live anywhere you want — including directly
in your views.py file — but community convention is to keep Form
classes in a separate file called forms.
I love the django book. Until I got to the section "Tying Your First
Form Class".
Problem:-"This class can live anywhere you want — including directly
in your views.py file — but community convention is to keep Form
classes in a separate file called forms.py. Create this f
Thank you, so I guess everything is working okay. :)
On May 25, 2:30 pm, Jacob Kaplan-Moss wrote:
> On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 1:04 PM, Boštjan Mejak
> wrote:
> > HTML source code can't be passed as a string. You morons.
>
> This isn't OK. Stop it at once.
>
> You've been warned about your tone on
On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 1:04 PM, Boštjan Mejak wrote:
> HTML source code can't be passed as a string. You morons.
This isn't OK. Stop it at once.
You've been warned about your tone once before. Please aim for a
professional, polite tone here or find another group to hang out in.
If you can't act
HTML source code can't be passed as a string. You morons.
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django-users+unsubscr...
t.render() call. It's a really
> small error but I want to make sure that my django module is correctly
> working. This is the output I got from the example in the django book:
>
> u"Dead John Smith, \n\nThanks for ordering Super Lawn Mower
> from Outdoor Equipment. It'
I'm up to the html template part of the djangobook, and I keep getting
a weird output error whenever I do a t.render() call. It's a really
small error but I want to make sure that my django module is correctly
working. This is the output I got from the example in the django book:
u
, Tom Evans wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 3:04 PM, Dipo Elegbede
> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> > i am currently reading the django book and following the examples step by
> step.
> > I have a view defined as follows:
> > from django.http import Http404, Http
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 3:04 PM, Dipo Elegbede wrote:
>
> Hi all,
> i am currently reading the django book and following the examples step by
> step.
> I have a view defined as follows:
> from django.http import Http404, HttpResponse
> import datetime
> #def myhome(
Hi all,
i am currently reading the django book and following the examples step by
step.
I have a view defined as follows:
from django.http import Http404, HttpResponse
import datetime
#def myhome(request):
#message = """
#
There are many books on Django. You can look on www.softpro.com,
Amazon, or your favorite book store.
I've gotten a lot out of two books. The Definitive Guide to Django and
Visual Quick Pro Django.
On Nov 28, 11:24 am, Matthias Runge wrote:
> Djangobook is available as printed edition from apress
template stuff much
FWIW.
-Original Message-
From: django-users@googlegroups.com
[mailto:django-us...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Lorenzo Franceschini
Sent: Sunday, November 28, 2010 5:49 AM
To: django-users@googlegroups.com
Subject: Django book
I'm new on this group, so first
The Definite Guide to Django is good, but I liked Beginning Django E-Commerce
that really nailed things down for me.
--- On Sun, 11/28/10, Lorenzo Franceschini
wrote:
From: Lorenzo Franceschini
Subject: Django book
To: django-users@googlegroups.com
Date: Sunday, November 28, 2010, 5:48 AM
2010/11/28 Lorenzo Franceschini
> I'm new on this group, so first of all... Hi to everybody!
>
> I'm a web developer, and I need to approach Django for a software project,
> so I would like to ask you an advice about the best book to read (in your
> opinion) in order to learn using this framework
Djangobook is available as printed edition from apress, as well as "practical
django projects". The latter, I think, aims to more advanced django
programmers. "The definitive guide to django" was a good starting point for me.
I hope, this helps for you,
Matthias
"Reeti Pal" schrieb:
>i gue
i gues there are no printed books available.
www.djangobook.com
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.2/contents/
are two sites from where you can learn
reeti
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I'm new on this group, so first of all... Hi to everybody!
I'm a web developer, and I need to approach Django for a software
project, so I would like to ask you an advice about the best book to
read (in your opinion) in order to learn using this framework, given that:
* I already have some ex
Is there anything specific you're concerned about?
Almost everything is applicable to the latest version. If you're not using
trunk, then just being familiar with the 1.2 release notes will be enough to
let you know if what you're reading is deprecated. Most Django books out there
haven't ben
The django book found here :
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/
is great, but is it being kept up to date with the current version of
django?
Just wondering.
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On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 2:00 AM, Russell Keith-Magee <
russ...@keith-magee.com> wrote:
> On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 7:06 AM, cool-RR wrote:
> > I'm just working on a book for my own project, and I was wondering: Is
> > the Django book written in ReST/Sphinx? I am consid
On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 7:06 AM, cool-RR wrote:
> I'm just working on a book for my own project, and I was wondering: Is
> the Django book written in ReST/Sphinx? I am considering whether I
> should write my book with that.
This is slightly off topic for this list, but I would ad
I'm just working on a book for my own project, and I was wondering: Is
the Django book written in ReST/Sphinx? I am considering whether I
should write my book with that.
Thanks,
Ram.
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On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 11:16 PM, kelp wrote:
> Yes, I did that, but for some reason, it is still not working, here's
> the contents of my views.py:
> from django.http import HttpResponse
> from django.shortcuts import render_to_response
> import datetime
>
> def hello(request):
>return HttpRe
Yes, I did that, but for some reason, it is still not working, here's
the contents of my views.py:
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response
import datetime
def hello(request):
return HttpResponse("Hello world")
def search_form(request):
return r
On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 10:17 PM, kelp wrote:
> Hello,
> Thanks! That fixed the problem, but now I am getting another one. I am
> getting an AttributeError now:
> http://dpaste.com/190232/
>
>
Before the url pattern that references views.search_form, the book mentions
adding:
from django.shortcut
Hello,
Thanks! That fixed the problem, but now I am getting another one. I am
getting an AttributeError now:
http://dpaste.com/190232/
This shows up even when I access localhost:8000/hello/ or basically
anything I have set up in urls.py
On May 2, 6:49 pm, Karen Tracey wrote:
> On Sun, May 2, 201
On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 8:41 PM, kelp wrote:
> Hello, I am trying to learn Django through the documentation:
> http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/chapter07/
>
> I am having a view issue, though. When I try to access
> http://127.0.0.1:8000/search-form/ after running my server, I get the
> following
Hello, I am trying to learn Django through the documentation:
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/chapter07/
I am having a view issue, though. When I try to access
http://127.0.0.1:8000/search-form/ after running my server, I get the
following error:
http://dpaste.com/190212/
Here is what I have in
Il giorno lun, 01/03/2010 alle 09.21 -0500, Shawn Milochik ha scritto:
> I highly recommend "The Definitive Guide," second edition. Then you'll know
> 1.1, and then learning the new stuff in 1.2 will be easy enough from the
> online docs.
>
> The transition from 1.1 to 1.2, although it adds new
I highly recommend "The Definitive Guide," second edition. Then you'll know
1.1, and then learning the new stuff in 1.2 will be easy enough from the online
docs.
The transition from 1.1 to 1.2, although it adds new functionality, doesn't
change enough to require you to re-learn everything.
Sh
Hello.
Someone know if any publisher is planning a django book updated to 1.2?
Or someone can suggest how to print the online doc without too much
trouble.
I'm in difficult at reading on my monitor, I prefer a printed copy
Max-B
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nd Pro Django.
On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 17:55, Achim Domma wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
> hint about what version it's written for. As it covers mostly
> internals and the ideas behind Django, it should
On Jan 27, 11:51 pm, Russell Keith-Magee
wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 6:23 AM, FxFocus
> wrote:
> > On Jan 27, 4:55 pm, Achim Domma wrote:
> >> Hi,
>
> >> I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
> >&g
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 1:07 AM, thanos wrote:
> It's useless. The "The definitive guide to Django" by Holovaty and
> Kaplan-moss is okay, but the Pro version is really just a waste of
> paper and time.
Everyone is entitled to an opinion, but I must say my opinion is the
exact opposite. Yes, Pro
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 6:23 AM, FxFocus wrote:
> On Jan 27, 4:55 pm, Achim Domma wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
>> hint about what version it's written for. As it covers mostly
>> in
On Jan 27, 4:55 pm, Achim Domma wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
> hint about what version it's written for. As it covers mostly
> internals and the ideas behind Django, it should not be outdated as
> qu
On 01/27/2010 05:55 PM, Achim Domma wrote:
Hi,
I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
hint about what version it's written for. As it covers mostly
internals and the ideas behind Django, it should not be outdated as
quickly as other books. H
On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 12:07 PM, thanos wrote:
> It's useless. The "The definitive guide to Django" by Holovaty and
> Kaplan-moss is okay, but the Pro version is really just a waste of
> paper and time.
More helpful than this would be a response to the actual question, which was
what version o
It's useless. The "The definitive guide to Django" by Holovaty and
Kaplan-moss is okay, but the Pro version is really just a waste of
paper and time.
Thanos Vassilakis
On Jan 27, 11:55 am, Achim Domma wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django&
Hi,
I'm interested in buying the "Pro Django" book. I could not find any
hint about what version it's written for. As it covers mostly
internals and the ideas behind Django, it should not be outdated as
quickly as other books. Has anybody read that book and can give some
feedb
After posting this I paid a little more attention to the text of the
book! I was just viewing the site root of course. The URL "http://
127.0.0.1:8000/hello" produces the correct results. Apologies for such
a careless entry.
Don
On Dec 16, 8:26 pm, nodxof wrote:
> I've just started learning djan
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 12:26 PM, nodxof wrote:
> I've just started learning django using "The Definitive Guide to
> django" second edition.
>
> Going by the initial example in Chapter 3 I get this.
>
> Page not found (404)
> Request Method: GET
> Request URL: http://127.0.0.1:8000/
> Using th
I've just started learning django using "The Definitive Guide to
django" second edition.
Going by the initial example in Chapter 3 I get this.
Page not found (404)
Request Method: GET
Request URL:http://127.0.0.1:8000/
Using the URLconf defined in mysite.urls, Django tried these URL
patterns
Hi All,
I represent Packt Publishing, the publishers of computer related
books.
We are planning to publish a new book on Django, titled Django Ajax
and are currently inviting potential authors to write it. We pay a
royalty of 16% and an advance against it.
The ideal candidate will be someone wit
> Could you recommend a good book about django that covers version
> 1.0? I've
> seen a few books, but all of them covers v0.96.
>
> If there is no book covering v1.0, should I buy those with v0.96, or
> are
> they too obsolete by now?
Are you sure you did a full search. There are loads of D
http://www.nabble.com/Any-good-django-book-that-covers-version-1.0--tp24026679p24026679.html
Sent from the django-users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
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On Thu, Jun 04, 2009 at 05:46:20PM -0700, chris wrote:
> is anybody else using [the Historical Records model, which is
> introduced in Apress' Pro Django book by Marty Alchin]?
Very likely so. I haven't, but I'm very interested in the
discussion of such, as it seems th
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