Since I am grinding my way through the learning process right now I thing I
have some fairly pithy comments to contribute. It seems that no two
tutorials do things the same way. I got bogged down in Two Scoops because
I needed a more detailed cookbook approach. Tango With Django is the best
ex
I am also looking for books which provide more of examples. The two scoops
of Django is more of doing things right than tutoring as MOnobot said. This
are the following things I want to learn in Django
I want to learn how to manually create form rather than creating modelform.
Combing forms from m
two scoops is more like ways of doing things right than really explaining
or tutoring.
2015-07-31 15:33 GMT+01:00 Mark Phillips :
> The django docs are excellent. However, if you are more of a book person,
> then try Try Two Scoops of Django (http://twoscoopspress.org/) - well
> written and updat
The django docs are excellent. However, if you are more of a book person,
then try Try Two Scoops of Django (http://twoscoopspress.org/) - well
written and updated.
Mark
On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 6:33 AM, rmschne wrote:
> I'm no way an advanced user, but I found the book simplistic and not worth
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 particulkar Django
>
* 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 things concerning Django?*
--
6 matches
Mail list logo