I appreciate your help. Thank you.
On Wednesday, September 12, 2012 11:28:44 AM UTC-6, Brian McKeever wrote:
>
> I actually figured it out.
>
> I created a new virtualenv on my development machine and installed the
> requirements to it, and from that virtualenv, syncdb f
> Did you try running "manage.py sql" on the production server to see if the
> SQL is printed out for the missing table?
>
> Cal
>
> On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 6:14 PM, Brian McKeever <kee...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
>> I am not using any databa
'
}
}
On Wednesday, September 12, 2012 11:02:10 AM UTC-6, Cal Leeming [Simplicity
Media Ltd] wrote:
>
> Are you using any sort of custom db router? (look for DATABASE_ROUTERS in
> settings).
>
> On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 5:05 PM, Brian McKeever <kee...@gmail.com
> > wrote
On my development machine, upon freshly creating my postgresql database,
when I run syncdb, it creates two invitation tables -
invitation_invitationkey and invitation_invitationuser.
On my production server, upon freshly creating my postgresql database, when
I run syncdb, it only creates
feel your pain, validating forms can be a PITA... Try reading through this
> last bit of the form validation docs:
>
> https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/forms/validation/#cleaning-...
>
> Cheers,
> André Terra
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 11, 2011 at 6:02
I have a search form that is used by a view to search for results and
then redirect to display them one at a time. If my search doesn't find
any objects matching the criteria, I'd like to display a message
saying so.
It seems natural to add this error to the search form and redisplay it
since it
I'm using Django-registration and Django-invitation. They both work on
my website, but they both come with tests that fail.
I don't think the tests are failing because the plug-ins don't work. I
think they're failing due to different testing environments. Django-
registration in particular gives
I fixed it by uninstalling Python 2.6.5 and installing 2.6.4 instead.
On Apr 19, 8:44 pm, Brian McKeever <kee...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm having the same problem. None of my tests are able to log in on
> this computer.
>
> Here's an example:
>
> def test_bug(s
I'm having the same problem. None of my tests are able to log in on
this computer.
Here's an example:
def test_bug(self):
response = self.client.get(reverse('home'))
self.assertRedirects(response, 'accounts/login/?next=/home/',
302, 200)
bob = User(
lly sure how to write models for such a small yet
> compound structure.
>
> How do I make, say, the first and second pages (about and contacs)
> with some different fields? I will reproduce the method for all other
> pages and repost here or question it again.
>
> On Dec 19,
I'm not sure I'm entirely understanding your question, but yes, that
does look easy to implement with django.
What part is troubling you? You seem to have a good idea of what you
want.
On Dec 17, 6:42 am, tezro wrote:
> Hello everyone. Making well-structured websites on
I wrote a html whitelist filter that only allows predefined tags, and
runs however many filters you want to specify on it.
I'd be curious what you guys thought about it.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/htmlfilterfacto/
On Dec 11, 2:51 pm, Shawn Milochik wrote:
> Look at
7, 8:17 am, turkan <kai.schl...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> Hello Brian.
>
> Strange, I am also using Eclipse downloaded from eclipse.org. Did you
> add any special folders to the PYTHONPATH? Are you using django from
> the Ubuntu repositories?
>
> On Dec 7, 6:06 am, Br
I was having the same trouble you are when I installed eclipse from
the repository.
I fixed it by downloading it again from the website
http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/
(Eclipse IDE for C/C++ Developers (79 MB) is the one I picked
specifically).
On Dec 6, 2:45 am, turkan
I haven't had a chance to play with this yet:
http://code.google.com/p/django-tracking/
but it might do what you want.
On Nov 19, 11:35 am, Fabio Natali wrote:
> Martin Lundberg wrote:
> > I am very new to Django but can't this be handled by middleware
> > instead?
Why do you want to split it across two models?
On Nov 5, 9:25 am, bruno desthuilliers
wrote:
> Hi all
>
> I have this pattern:
>
> class ModelOne(models):
> content_type = models.ForeignKey(ContentType)
>
> class ModelTwo(models):
> model_one =
More info is needed. Could you post your urls?
On Oct 25, 8:39 pm, Ross wrote:
> I just neared the end of the poll application and converted everything
> to generic views according to the tutorial. Once I started up the
> server though, I could only find my admin page. I
Generally, I'd create a different app for different functionality. IE
one for authentication related stuff, another for the forum, another
specific to the website. It's really a matter of style though.
You can put the model definitions most anywhere.
You might want to check out the sites
It's been giving me a "502 Bad Gateway
nginx" for at least a couple weeks now.
Are there any other good sources of django plugins?
I know of the official python packages:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi?%3Aaction=browse
and django snippets:
http://www.djangosnippets.org/
Are you asking about the technical details of how it's done, or just
how to do it?
If the latter, django uses field and form level validation.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/fields/#field-options
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/forms/fields/#ref-forms-fields
On Oct
ot;Ed Kawas" <ed.ka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Ah, so there is no way to use 'create_object' when doing this, right?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Eddie
>
> -Original Message-
> From: django-users@googlegroups.com [mailto:django-us...@googlegroups.com]
>
> On Behalf Of
users@googlegroups.com [mailto:django-us...@googlegroups.com]
>
> On Behalf Of Brian McKeever
> Sent: October-12-09 11:52 AM
> To: Django users
> Subject: Re: showing user data in a view
>
> The easy way is to just check that the owner of X is the user logged
> in.
> I
The easy way is to just check that the owner of X is the user logged
in.
I don't know that you can pass an argument to the decorator, but you
could certainly just use an if statement.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/auth/#limiting-access-to-logged-in-users-that-pass-a-test
On Oct
Is there a reason why you're storing an email address instead of just
selecting the user or creating a new one?
On Oct 10, 12:41 am, Andrew Pendleton wrote:
> I'm trying to figure out the best way to add an email address form
> field to the edit page for a model in the Django
It may make debugging a little harder, but it gives you a lot more
flexibility in constructing objects.
Here's a factoryish method I wrote for testing:
def create_teacher(textbook = None,
user = None,
start_state = None,
"Does it make sense to include the fields of both models into the
same form?"
Models represent how a computer stores your data in a database.
Forms allow humans to input data into your database.
Ideally, the two would be the same. Realistically, humans and
computers think quite differently and
This should do what you want:
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/auth/#django.contrib.auth.decorators.permission_required
On Sep 25, 2:35 pm, Dan Cox wrote:
> Django Users,
>
> I'm pretty new to django so please excuse my ignorance.
>
> I'd like to redirect users
t; \S3.py" in encode
> 84. b64_hmac = base64.encodestring(hmac.new
> (aws_secret_access_key, str, sha).digest()).strip()
> File "C:\Python25\lib\hmac.py" in new
> 121. return HMAC(key, msg, digestmod)
> File "C:\Python25\lib\hmac.py" in __init__
>
A stack trace would be more useful.
On Sep 25, 12:07 pm, Nick wrote:
> I'm using the django-storages backends from David Larlet to upload
> images to s3 from inside the admin. When i try to run everything I
> get an error:
>
> object of type 'NoneType' has no len()
>
> Here
I'm not familiar with the plugin, but I would guess that it's trying
to add itself to the python path. That way it's easily available for
any django project without having to include it in an individual
project.
I would bet that it'd work just fine included manually in your project
without
;I would probably...", so he may have been
> implying that there was a technical reason but most likely he was just
> stating his preference.
>
> On Sep 25, 5:03 am, Chris Withers <ch...@simplistix.co.uk> wrote:
>
> > Jani Tiainen wrote:
> > > Chris With
Withers <ch...@simplistix.co.uk> wrote:
> Brian McKeever wrote:
> > .count is definitely the way to go. Although, I would probably pass it
> > to your template instead of determining it there.
>
> What difference does it make?
>
> Chris
>
> --
> Simplistix - Con
The presave signal passes the instance of the updated object to the
signal automatically, so your code should work with minimal
modifications.
Try this:
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
def member_check(sender, **kwargs):
if Project.objects.filter(id__exact=self.id).count():
> On Sep 23, 11:05 pm, Brian McKeever <kee...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I remember a quote from either headfirst java or design patterns that
> > said something like:
> > "The key to inheritance is to abstract functionality."
>
> > I realize we're
I would write a custom tag that wraps ugettext but checks for None.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/custom-template-tags/#writing-custom-template-filters
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/i18n/#standard-translation
On Sep 24, 10:14 am, Florian Schweikert
I think you'll have to write a custom template tag:
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/custom-template-tags/#parsing-until-another-block-tag-and-saving-contents
On Sep 24, 10:56 am, J wrote:
> Hello,
>
> How can I detect whether the template tag truncatewords_html
.count is definitely the way to go. Although, I would probably pass it
to your template instead of determining it there.
On Sep 24, 10:32 am, Chris Withers wrote:
> Chris Withers wrote:
> > objects = model.objects.all()
> > paginator = Paginator(objects,10)
> >
I imagine request.path would do what you want:
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/request-response/#attributes
On Sep 24, 10:37 am, Christophe Pettus wrote:
> My apologies, because I am certain that this is documented somewhere,
> but I cannot seem to find it.
>
>
I'm not too familiar with customizing the admin, but you want to use
the range field lookup.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/querysets/#range
On Sep 23, 11:07 pm, Alvaro Mouriño wrote:
> Hi list.
>
> I'm developing a news application that handles
I would try creating a view that uses a form factory to define some
dynamic forms.
This post explains how to create a dynamic form factory:
http://www.b-list.org/weblog/2008/nov/09/dynamic-forms/
and then I'd return the Wizard that has the new forms as arguments.
I bet it would work, but I
The docs say that it's possible although unrecommended to use choices
dynamically.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/fields/#choices
However, you could easily do it at the form level or with a custom
setter method.
On Sep 20, 4:57 pm, Doug wrote:
> Lets say for
Python is inherently cross-platform, so you just need the same version
as everyone else.
On Sep 23, 9:32 pm, Tim wrote:
> Is there a Windows version of Django?
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That's a little different.
If you want your desktop apps to all directly connect to your server
database, I'm not sure what security issues you'd be exposing yourself
to. I figured you wanted a local database where it wouldn't matter if
the user messed it up.
I mean, I'm not saying it can't be
Dojango seems really helpful. Thanks.
On Sep 23, 8:40 pm, Ovnicraft <ovnicr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2009/9/23 Brian McKeever <kee...@gmail.com>
>
>
>
> > I just decided to learn to use dojo yesterday.
> > I chose it because it has a huge library of
I remember a quote from either headfirst java or design patterns that
said something like:
"The key to inheritance is to abstract functionality."
I realize we're not talking about inheritance, but I think it still
applies.
It may make logical sense that a user object has a blog that has
To only get one image, you use a limit.
like
movie.images_set.all()[:1]
On Sep 22, 2:37 pm, Joshua Russo wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 7:23 PM, MV wrote:
>
> > I have a Movie model
> > and I have a Image model
> > the Image model has a
I just decided to learn to use dojo yesterday.
I chose it because it has a huge library of GUI widgets that are all
suppose to be accessible to people with disabilities.
I found this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_JavaScript_frameworks
quite helpful.
What I didn't know until
I imagine you're talking about using django models for database
management?
There's nothing stopping you really. Django is just a python program.
All you need to do is:
Create a django project (as per the tutorial). Set up the database
like normal in your settings file.
Create your app with
Try using a postsave signal. It'll automatically trigger your method
upon saving a Project.
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/signals/#receiver-functions
Basically, all you'd need is:
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
def member_check(sender, **kwargs):
#your code
I would put all signal code in the models.
I'm afraid I'm not familiar with trackback, but I would imagine that
all you'd need to do is:
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
def your_trackback_function(sender, **kwargs):
#whatever goes here
What does your DATABASE_NAME setting set to in your settings.py file?
I know django gives that error if the path is set incorrectly.
It needs to say something like: '/home/user_name/django_project/
your_database.db'
if you're using sqlite
On Sep 23, 4:47 pm, RcCypher wrote:
Here's the documentation for the sites framework which does everything
you need:
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/contrib/sites/#ref-contrib-sites
On Sep 23, 3:13 pm, Jean-Nicolas wrote:
> I would like to use Django for my next project, however, the setup is
Particularly, how do you write the project in such a way that database
queries don't constantly have to reach across 5 classes?
For example, this query needs to know the innards of the Definition,
UserDefinition, and UserData classes:
basic_query = Definition.objects.filter(concept =
I recently learned vim, and I'm a ginormous fan of it for editing.
Although, I use pydev for difficult debugging.
On Sep 8, 5:37 am, Mike Ramirez wrote:
> On Tuesday 08 September 2009 04:11:38 ThinRhino wrote:
>
> > Mike,
>
> > Does Eric4 support mercurial? I tried google,
I'm sure I made some dumb mistake, but I just can't see it.
Basically, I'm having difficulty connecting to the signal with my
model.
#my test
def test_set_trigger_bug(self):
self.assertEqual(len(game_reset.receivers), 0)
def trigger(): pass
Thank you. I appreciate the quick response.
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What am I doing wrong?
Is there any other way to do what I want?
I'm basically trying to implement the GOF's strategy design pattern
(the real code is more complicated than this example).
## my models
class Donkey(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=11)
class Barn(
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