Thanks for your help guys. I ended up creating a class for for orders and
customers class and then I passed those objects to the tepmlate inside a
dict. That worked.

Cheers,

On 12 January 2012 21:55, Masklinn <maskl...@masklinn.net> wrote:

> On 2012-01-12, at 11:47 , Daniel Roseman wrote:
> > However I'm confused by your initial description. What you show is not a
> > dict at all, but a list of 2-tuples (each containing a string and a
> list).
> > Is that a single value of the dict, or what?
>
> I'm guessing it's the initialization vector for the dict, though I'm not
> sure why he used this for a non-ordered dict.
>
>    >>> dict([(1, [2, 3]), (5, [6, 7, 8])])
>    {1: [2, 3], 5: [6, 7, 8]}
>    >>> collections.defaultdict(lambda: [], [(1, [2, 3]), (5, [6, 7, 8])])
>    defaultdict(<function <lambda> at 0x1004ce488>, {1: [2, 3], 5: [6, 7,
> 8]})
>
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "Django users" group.
> To post to this group, send email to django-users@googlegroups.com.
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> django-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en.
>
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Django users" group.
To post to this group, send email to django-users@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
django-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en.

Reply via email to