I have two quick comments, check out geopy:
http://code.google.com/p/geopy/
and this website
http://www.movable-type.co.uk/scripts/latlong-db.html
Geopy can give you lat/lng for a given address and that other website has
formulas for using lat/lng to calculate a bounding box/circle. It may be a
Congrats on the release Steve.
As a developer that has been using Mezzanine for a bit under a year
and a half I have to say that I have been really pleased with the
project. A lot has changed in the time since I began using Mezzanine
but even in it's infancy Mezzanine provided a very usable base
Couldn't he also just add the router before syncdb and then they would
be created in the correct database?
Chris take a look at this documentation if you haven't already, it
explains routers which tell Django which database to use for a
particular query:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topic
I think something like this would work:
{% with price_for_pax service pax '' as pfp %}
{% if service.price == pfp %}
do something
{% endif %}
{% endwith %}
Alternatively if price_for_pax is only used for comparing to
service.price you could have it return true or false based on whether
whatever
I work a lot with Mezzanine which is a CMS that uses Django. A
security issue was recently revealed where an admin user, lets call
him A, (they can post rich content) could put a cleverly constructed
javascript on a page such that if a superuser, let's call her B, then
visited the page it would el
osting via ajax to the admin, rendering obsolete this sort of
injection, and still allowing admin users to post javascripts? I'm
not sure if it's always possible to reliably differentiate between an
ajax vs non-ajax request.
On May 12, 7:31 pm, jim wrote:
> On Fri, May 11, 2012 at
That is as I feared, thanks for the help Russ.
On May 14, 4:58 pm, Russell Keith-Magee
wrote:
> On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 5:09 AM, Josh Cartmell wrote:
> > Thanks for the responses and insight everyone (special thanks to
> > Russel to clarifying what type of attack this is). I
Why not use the same database? i.e. is there any reason that they have
to have separate databases?
On Dec 6, 5:10 am, psychok7 wrote:
> Thanks for the answer.. but what I. Could have synchronous replication? What
> do you advise over a rest interface?
--
You received this message because you a
Can you look at the database in some way and see if FK_Formats_id
actually exists in the table?
If you added that to the model after you had already synced it then
running another syncdb will not create the new field. I would suggest
looking into South which will handle database migrations for yo
This (http://software.clapper.org/daemonize/) may do what you want and
can be installed with homebrew on a mac, but if this is in any way a
production setting, I wouldn't do it. The dev server hasn't gone
through any security audits and could and probably does have unknown
weaknesses in that regar
Today I noticed that while this breaks things complaining about an
unexpected kwarg empty_label:
some_field = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(
widget=forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple(),
queryset=SomeM2mField.objects.all(),
empty_label='empty')
doing the following in a form's init works (as
It looks to me like your wsgi script is name index.py (which is fine)
but you are referencing index.wsgi in your apache conf which probably
doesn't exist. Have a look through your error logs and you might see
the same.
On Mar 31, 12:20 am, Avnesh Shakya wrote:
> hi,
> please tell me,what is i
You could set up a fabric file that handles the pushing. In our local
repo create a file called live_settings.py (which is ignored by git).
When fabric pushes to the production server tell it to copy
live_settings.py to local_settings.py on the production server.
On Mar 29, 1:11 am, surya wrote:
+1 for webfaction, it shouldn't be a problem to compile and use your own
binary with them.
On Monday, April 8, 2013 11:52:41 PM UTC-7, larsvegas wrote:
>
> Can somebody advice me on a provider where I can run my own executable?
> The program I need to run is written is c++ and can be installed o
I created a Twitter bot that tweets the title and provides links to
messages posted in the Django Announce Google Group (Django release
announcements for example). If anyone is interested you can see it
here:
http://twitter.com/djangoannounce
Feel free to give me feedback, or point out bugs.
--
I have a simple login form on every page like this:
{% csrf_token %}
It was working great on the dev server. Then I went into production.
Now every form submission is being interpreted as a GET rather than a
POST unless I am actually on the page /shop/account/ (the forms
action). Has anyone
I forgot to mention my development server is fastcgi/apache.
Thnaks
On Feb 21, 11:15 am, Josh Cartmell wrote:
> I have a simple login form on every page like this:
>
> {% csrf_token %}
>
> type="password">
>
>
>
> It was working great on the dev ser
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