On Jan 3, 4:09 am, wC <krusty_the4cl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Chris,
>
> I think was somehow in the same stage not so long ago... Here is how I went
> about it:
>
> 1. I watched a db-class video from time to time (teaches you what joins are
> etcetera). Using the ORM without db knowledge is ok if efficiency is not
> your main concern. Sooner or later you have to make database design choices
> and only relying on the community is going to slow you down. Good advice is
> expensive (time or effort).
> 2. Having read the docs on djangoproject.com (which are huge), I read
> djangobook.com, then I started building my own apps following some of the
> tutorials fromhttps://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/Tutorials. I made myself
> a todo-app, for instance. There are about three or four tutorials for that
> and each of them adds some knowledge (the nettuts one is for true
> beginners). If you work on you app a bit you'll gain knowledge in testing,
> migrating, implementing design and much more. I always asked myself 'does
> my program solve a problem'. If it does not, you will get lost pretty
> quickly.
> 3. ?
>
> Not sure what the next step would be? Deploy a small website? Use third
> party OS code? Any suggestions?
>
> Cheers
> wC

Thanks man, I will follow your advice!

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