I have a dictionary, and I'd like to iterate over the keys, using the
keys to look up the result, like:
{% for key in myDict %}
The key is {{key}} and the value is {{myDict.key}}.
{% endfor %}
Only, it doesn't work. It seems like . lookups
require the argument to be a literal, not a variable.
On Fri, 2007-11-16 at 18:55 -0800, Graham Dumpleton wrote:
> Python leaks environment variables between sub interpreters in certain
> circumstances based on the order in which the sub interpreters are
> created.
>
> It is described a bit in section 'Application Environment Variables'
> of:
>
>
Hi all,
Yes, I realize that maybe this should go to the mod_python list instead,
but I wanted to rule Django out first. Here's my configuration, with
Apache2 on Linux (sorry I couldn't make this shorter):
I've got four Django sites I host under different domain names, which
are actually all
Thanks so much for your response, Russell.
On Sat, 2007-11-10 at 12:10 +0900, Russell Keith-Magee wrote:
> 1) Get hold of a cursor and write the full SQL query you want
> yourself. It sounds like all you want is SELECT SUM(bar) FROM MYTABLE,
> so this may be the easiest and most stable solution.
Hi all,
I'm looking to get the sum of a column. I've seen plenty of examples
which illustrate using a QuerySet's extra(select={'foo': 'sum(bar)'})
method, but my Postgres pukes on that:
ERROR: column "app_model.id" must appear in the GROUP BY clause or be
used in an aggregate function
After
On Fri, 2007-05-18 at 14:27 -0700, Jon Lesser wrote:
> I tool Malcolm's advice and looked closely at the packets going back
> and forth. Upon pressing an input button nested within an anchor,
> Firefox was sending two identical requests to the server, thus causing
> my code to be executed twice.
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