I'm new to Django, so this is probably some kind of beginner's mistake.
Django is set up to run via Apache and WSGI. It uses Python 3. The first
app I wrote works fine. When I got to the second I wanted to use an app
name that contained non-ASCII letters. But I can't get that to work at
all
M Hashmi:
> List down your "civ.apps.CivConfig" also restart Gunicorn, and reload Nginx.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean by "list down". Do you want me to
comment it out?
In any case, to make an even more clean test case, I replaced my
Django site with one I built from scratch. I.e. I start
M Hashmi:
> Reply me back I am waiting. Apologies if my assumption caused your time.
No need to apologize! You are trying to help me. I'm grateful.
In doing my simplified test case, I forgot to add the new app to
INSTALLED_APP. Thanks for the pointer!
But after fixing that, I get an "Interna
> Please makemigrations/migrate and restart server. It says its not getting
> proper data from wsgi.py.
As my models.py is empty, I thought I didn't need to do any
migration. But I've done so now just in case. It doesn't seem to
change anything.
> wsgi.py is not able to stream data to httpd be
M Hashmi:
> Can you kindly post your installed apps again and root urls.py in project
> directory.
Sure, it's attached in this mail too.
> You said you have nothing in your app models so is there nothing at all in
> app?
Correct. To isolate the problem I've made a minimal app that doesn't
do an
M Hashmi:
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/728891/correct-way-to-define-python-source-code-encoding
I'm using UTF-8 in Python 3 where it is the default. So that is
probably not the issue.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14083111/should-i-use-encoding-declaration-in-python3
--
You receiv
M Hashmi:
> I am sorry but I need some time for R&D coz few things about encoding/decoding
> are confusing.
Agreed! :-) I've always found Python's encoding handling confusing.
Not quite as much in Python 3 as in Python 2, but still.
To rule out all eventualities, I made a second app called "asci
For the benefit of anyone following this thread. I've found some
relevant information, even if I don't understand the entire picture.
The important point seems to be the locale in which the Apache server
is running. The default Fedora configuration sets LANG=C for the
httpd server. Apparently,
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