I've read and reread the tutorial and I'm working on writing a very simple
banking app by copying and modifying what's in the tutorial. I've started a
new project and copied what was on the first two pages of the tutorial and
I've written a new models file. Make migrations works okay with the ne
Look like you forget to indent the method inside your class.
2016-08-01 13:43 GMT+02:00 Neil Hunt :
> I've read and reread the tutorial and I'm working on writing a very simple
> banking app by copying and modifying what's in the tutorial. I've started a
> new project and copied what was on the fi
I have always imported models, and then:
class Foo(models.Model):
bar = models.CharField(max_length=100)
which is what the examples in the django docs do - I copied it when I
started using Django and the habit stuck.
It is a lot less verbose to do:
from models import Model, CharField
cla
A models file might use a lot of class from the django.db.models
module and importing each class lead to lengthy import line. That's
might be one reason.
The better reason might be that a lot of these class are named the
same in django.forms and django.db.models. When you type
models.CharField, you
On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 05:09:37AM -0700, graeme wrote:
> I have always imported models, and then:
>
> class Foo(models.Model):
> bar = models.CharField(max_length=100)
>
>
> which is what the examples in the django docs do - I copied it when I
> started using Django and the habit stuck.
>
That was an silly basic python mistake. Doh! I just indented the method
correctly and the test ran fine. Thanks a lot, ludovic :)
On Monday, August 1, 2016 at 12:58:01 PM UTC+1, ludovic coues wrote:
>
> Look like you forget to indent the method inside your class.
>
> 2016-08-01 13:43 GMT+02:00 N
I have a view that is accessed both from the browser and from a
non-browser app. The request from the non browser app come from a
remote app where the user has already had to login (or they would
never get to the point where they could cause the request to be sent).
Is there a way to make login req
Hi,
I am new to Django, I have been using TurboGears for the last few years. I
would like to help with regards to a multi search function.
In essence I would like 1 search field/form that will search multiple
fields of different datatype example user should be able to search the
model/db for e
You could use an alternative way to login the user, transparent to the
user. Like giving a token to the app when it login.
2016-08-01 18:17 GMT+02:00 Larry Martell :
> I have a view that is accessed both from the browser and from a
> non-browser app. The request from the non browser app come from
The problem is selectively bypassing or overriding the @login_required
decorator. The view is called from an endpoint that has that decorator
on it.
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 1:52 PM, ludovic coues wrote:
> You could use an alternative way to login the user, transparent to the
> user. Like giving a
On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 12:17:38PM -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
> I have a view that is accessed both from the browser and from a
> non-browser app. The request from the non browser app come from a
> remote app where the user has already had to login (or they would
> never get to the point where the
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 11:33 AM, Michal Petrucha <
michal.petru...@konk.org> wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 12:17:38PM -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
> > I have a view that is accessed both from the browser and from a
> > non-browser app. The request from the non browser app come from a
> > rem
Django 1.10 and a bug fix release for the 1.9 series (1.9.9) are now
available:
https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2016/aug/01/django-110-released/
With the release of Django 1.10, Django 1.9 has reach end of mainstream
support. It will continue to receive security and data loss fixes for
an
Hi Jurgens,
Django is the right choice.
With Django all are possible.
All that you described are possible. If you need more precise answer give
us more precise question.
Regards,
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 4:21 PM, Jurgens de Bruin
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am new to Django, I have been using TurboGears
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 3:03 PM, James Schneider
wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 11:33 AM, Michal Petrucha
> wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 12:17:38PM -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
>> > I have a view that is accessed both from the browser and from a
>> > non-browser app. The request from t
The session cookie ?
Or you could use another decorator or a middle-ware doing
authentication based on the ip and some information passed as get
argument. Like a token returned by django when you auth the user.
The request hit the new decorator, the decorator notice the user isn't
logged in and t
I am having trouble with a cookiecutter-django installation. I don't
have a normal virtualenv setup because I use Eclipse IDE with PyDev
plugin. This means that all of the project files are outside of the
virtualenv wrapper and vrtualenv is never actually activated. My OS is
Debian Linux with K
Thanks for the tip, but besides defining the type of the output it is
unclear how this can be used to perform a date difference operation.
What I would need is to convert *timezone.now()* into a date constant that
can be understood by the database, whatever the database is. If I leave it
as it
How do I get the session cookie from the login and then how do I pass it in
the subsequent request?
On Monday, August 1, 2016, ludovic coues wrote:
> The session cookie ?
>
> Or you could use another decorator or a middle-ware doing
> authentication based on the ip and some information passed as
On Mon, Aug 01, 2016 at 10:12:53PM +0200, ludovic coues wrote:
> The session cookie ?
>
> Or you could use another decorator or a middle-ware doing
> authentication based on the ip and some information passed as get
> argument. Like a token returned by django when you auth the user.
Using the IP
Hi,
I have the following models defined:
from django.db import models
class IssuedCard(models.Model):
plan_type = models.CharField(max_length=255)# This is actually
a ForeignKey
apn = models.CharField(max_length=255) # This is actually
a Choice
# .
Hi,
I am not cleat of what you suggested as a dictionary method and how you are
going to use it.
But any way let me check my guesses and I will be back.
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 11:25 PM, Yoann Duriaud
wrote:
> Thanks for the tip, but besides defining the type of the output it is
> unclear how t
Hi Gary,
It is not clear what errors you have gotten.
Can you please describe them?
I am not using Eclipse any more so can not reproduce you problem by my own.
But all should be run without problem
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 11:14 PM, Gary Roach
wrote:
> I am having trouble with a cookiecutter-dja
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