oh well.

check that you have an __init__.py file in the templatetags directory

try this:
in bookmark_tags.py  (and do keep the name that way, or later you will be
caught by this)

right before the import line throw it in into the debugger:

import pdb; pdb.set_trace()

in the debugger try:

>>> import bookmarks
>>> dir(bookmarks)
>>> bookmarks.__file__

if you can't even import bookmarks then its not actually on your python
path.  remember that your python path needs to include the directory
directly above the bookmarks app.

f;lix


On Thu, Oct 16, 2008 at 4:53 AM, Chris Amico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Tried that. Still no good. I renamed the file as bookmark_tags.py and
> deleted every .pyc file in the app. Nothing in my templatetags
> directory actually compiled--neither __init__.py nor bookmarks.py
> (even after being renamed).
>
> Like I said before, when I take out the import line (from
> bookmarks.models import Bookmark) the library loads (even when called
> bookmarks.py) and only hits an error when it tries to access
> Bookmark.objects.all().
>
>
>
> On Oct 15, 6:22 pm, felix <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > this gets me every time.
> >
> > the error is yes because the template tag is called bookmarks.py
> > and its inside a module called bookmarks.py
> >
> > rename it to bookmarks_tags.py ...
> >
> > and now ....
> >
> > DELETE THE DAMNED OLD bookmarks.pyc file !
> >
> > python is still finding the old compiled file.
> >
> > its happened to me twice already in the exact same fashion.
> >
> > -f;lix
> >
> > On Oct 15, 7:17 pm, Chris Amico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > The templatetag file is indeed called bookmarks.py. I thought of that,
> > > tried renaming it as bookmark_tags.py, and got the same error. I'll
> > > add that the bookmarks app lives on my python path, not in any
> > > particular project, since I'm trying to make this as reusable as
> > > possible.
> >
> > > At one point, I tried just removing the line 'from bookmarks.models
> > > import Bookmark', and the library loaded, but it hit an error
> > > (correctly) when I tried use it, saying Bookmark wasn't defined.
> >
> > > On Oct 14, 11:45 pm, Daniel Roseman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > wrote:
> >
> > > > On Oct 15, 7:38 am, Chris Amico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > > > I have a simple bookmarks model based on the one in James Bennett's
> <a
> > > > > href="http://code.google.com/p/cab/source/browse/trunk/models.py?
> > > > > r=130">Cab</a> application. I'm using a generic relation so it can
> > > > > live in its own app and a user can bookmark any object on the site
> > > > > (I'm planning on reusing this app on a couple projects). I'm
> running
> > > > > into a problem creating an {% if_bookmarked %}templatetag.
> >
> > > > > When I load the tag library I get this error: 'bookmarks' is not a
> > > > > valid tag library: Could not loadtemplatelibrary from
> > > > > django.templatetags.bookmarks,Nomodulenamedmodels
> >
> > > > > Here's what the tagmodulelooks like:
> >
> > > > <snip>
> >
> > > > > The bookmarking model works fine on its own, and I've gotten the
> > > > > functions in thetemplatetag to work in isolation in the
> interpreter,
> > > > > but when I load the tag library it breaks thetemplate. What am I
> > > > > missing here?
> >
> > > > Is the templatetag file itself called bookmarks.py, by any chance? If
> > > > so, the code may be trying to import that rather than the top-level
> > > > bookmarks directory. Try renaming the file, although I would also
> > > > recommend using full paths when importing (ie from
> > > > projectname.bookmarks.models).
> > > > --
> > > > DR
> >
>

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