Hey Cheng,
On Friday 15 September 2006 17:11, Cheng Zhang wrote:
> On Sep 13, 2006, at 11:21 PM, Eric Walstad wrote:
> > One of the developers on my team works on a Mac, while the other
> > two of
> > us are on Linux. Our apps are deployed on Linux PC machines. The Mac
> > guy had a harder time
Totally agree with Tyson. You won't regret picking a Mac for Django/
Python or any web design work at all.
TextMate is a great editor, at least as much powerful as Vim or
Emacs, with a overwhelmingly damn pretty looking and enjoyable GUI.
The only con of TextMate is it ain't free and open sou
On Sep 14, 2006, at 8:01 PM, spacedman wrote:
> I'd be tempted to say to do your development on the platform that most
> closely matches your deployment platform. We're using Apache and
> mod_python on our own Linux web server here, so that's the best thing
> for development for us.
My opinion
On Sep 13, 2006, at 11:21 PM, Eric Walstad wrote:
> One of the developers on my team works on a Mac, while the other
> two of
> us are on Linux. Our apps are deployed on Linux PC machines. The Mac
> guy had a harder time setting up his development environment,
> having to
> compile more pa
I use Windows at home for video and audio editing, and getting Django
things to work on there can be annying at times - its usually file
paths to python, and things like #!/bin/env and all that, and whether
you run from cygwin or DOS shell. Aaargh, the horror. I wrote my poker
blog at home on Wind
On 14-Sep-06, at 1:48 PM, brian corrigan wrote:
> The only problem I came across with the Mac (iBook) was that there is
> no c compiler installed. You can download xcode tools
it is there on the install CD, but not in the default install
--
regards
kg
http://lawgon.livejournal.com
http://nrc
Fortunately the xcode tools is on the install DVD for the newer OSX
versions.
>
> The only problem I came across with the Mac (iBook) was that there is
> no c compiler installed. You can download xcode tools (I think) from
> the apple developer site which will give you gcc. The problem is tha
brian corrigan schrieb:
> The only problem I came across with the Mac (iBook) was that there is
> no c compiler installed. You can download xcode tools (I think) from
> the apple developer site which will give you gcc. The problem is that
> xcode is about a 1GB (latest realease)./installing_django
The only problem I came across with the Mac (iBook) was that there is
no c compiler installed. You can download xcode tools (I think) from
the apple developer site which will give you gcc. The problem is that
xcode is about a 1GB (latest realease). Takes a while to download.
Other than that though
On 13-Sep-06, at 10:43 PM, Tyson Tate wrote:
> Heck, why not get the best of both worlds: Get a MacBook or other
> Intel Mac. You can run the delicious UNIX-y goodness of MacOS X for
> real work and then drop in to Windows when you need to do whatever it
> is that people would want to do in Wind
On 13-Sep-06, at 8:51 PM, Eric Walstad wrote:
> was that there were some differences in the capabilities of the Mac
> Python
do you have to use Mac Python? Cant you install the standard python
like on other BSDs?
--
regards
kg
http://lawgon.livejournal.com
http://nrcfosshelpline.in/web/
I also use laptop with dual boot (Windows/Fedora) and I'm very happy.On 9/13/06, Michael Samoylov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:I use PC with linux. PC laptop is more than twice cheaper than Mac
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Heck, why not get the best of both worlds: Get a MacBook or other
Intel Mac. You can run the delicious UNIX-y goodness of MacOS X for
real work and then drop in to Windows when you need to do whatever it
is that people would want to do in Windows (get headaches?).
Django works wonderfully o
On OSX, one of the first thing I do is download and installthe latest Python from http://www.python.org/downloadIt's straight forward and let you have up to date python
so you can avoid problems like that.On 9/13/06, Eric Walstad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
One of the developers on my team works on
I use PC with linux. PC laptop is more than twice cheaper than Mac
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On 9/13/06, keukaman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I am in the market for a notebook computer that I will be doing my web
> design work on. Could I get some comments related to which is better
> for Django work - P.C. or Mac, as well as some pros & cons of each?
I use OS X as well for all my dev
On 9/14/06, Eric Walstad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> One of the developers on my team works on a Mac, while the other two of
> us are on Linux. Our apps are deployed on Linux PC machines. The Mac
> guy had a harder time setting up his development environment, having to
> compile more packages f
keukaman wrote:
> I am in the market for a notebook computer that I will be doing my web
> design work on. Could I get some comments related to which is better
> for Django work - P.C. or Mac, as well as some pros & cons of each?
> Thanks.
One of the developers on my team works on a Mac, while th
I use both ( well, mainly the MacBook lately ), and I cannot notice
any real difference between the two ( regarding django development of
course ). Only one thing - postgres setup can be a little tricky on
the macbook, while mySQL has a nice native installer which "just
works". You have
On 9/13/06, keukaman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am in the market for a notebook computer that I will be doing my web
> design work on. Could I get some comments related to which is better
> for Django work - P.C. or Mac, as well as some pros & cons of each?
> Thanks.
I'll be the first to say
I am in the market for a notebook computer that I will be doing my web
design work on. Could I get some comments related to which is better
for Django work - P.C. or Mac, as well as some pros & cons of each?
Thanks.
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