Hi guys,
I developed some apps that I want share between 2 of my own projects.
What is the best practise for this?
I could just copy them over, but what if there needs to be a bug-fix?
Is there something like a 'private pip install'?
Kind regards
Thomas
--
You received this message because yo
You can add an ssh git path
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4830856/is-it-possible-to-use-pip-to-install-a-package-from-a-private-github-repository
Sent from my iPhone
> On Mar 21, 2015, at 8:50 AM, ThomasTheDjangoFan
> wrote:
>
> Hi guys,
>
> I developed some apps that I want share betwee
You can put the shared app in a git repository and use a git submodule.
https://chrisjean.com/git-submodules-adding-using-removing-and-updating/
Using pip with git for update a package, you need to manual remove and add
again. The update command no work fine.
On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 1:46 PM, Br
I second the suggestion of a git submodule, as it makes changes to the
shared app much more convenient. This is also how I deal with third-party
apps that I've forked. There is a small learning curve on git-submodule,
but it's worth it.
On Saturday, March 21, 2015 at 2:09:33 PM UTC-4, Ezequiel
While using the Django development server, I like the appearance of the
admin site from django.contrib. After deploying the application on a
remote Apache server however, the appearance of admin is very different and
I do not like it. The css files in
/usr/local/lib/python3.3/site-packages/dj
They should look exactly the same
are all the static files (CSS / JS) being loaded correctly in production?
On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 8:27 PM, talex wrote:
> While using the Django development server, I like the appearance of the
> admin site from django.contrib. After deploying the application
6 matches
Mail list logo