On Jul 29, 2009, at 9:57 PM, Salvatore Leone wrote:
>
>
>> Given the way boolean tests go in Python, you should just be able to
>> test for the dictionary itself:
>>
>> if request.GET:
>>
>> else:
>>
>>
>> E
>>
>
> mmm I don't think so, I think request.GET is true even if the
> d
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
There is a more "pythonic" way to test, use request.GET.get(,
False)
e.g.:
if request.GET.get('q', False):
etc.
That tests the dict for the key 'q' if it's not there, it returns false.
Luke Seelenbinder
luke.seelenbin...@gmail.com
Salvatore Leon
> Given the way boolean tests go in Python, you should just be able to
> test for the dictionary itself:
>
> if request.GET:
>
> else:
>
>
> E
>
mmm I don't think so, I think request.GET is true even if the dictionary
is empty, isn't it?
so the test will allways return tru
On Jul 29, 2009, at 6:06 PM, Salvatore Leone wrote:
>
> I answer my self:
>
> all I need is to test the length of the dictionary.
>
> if request.method == "GET" and len(request.GET) != 0:
Given the way boolean tests go in Python, you should just be able to
test for the dictionary itself:
if
I answer my self:
all I need is to test the length of the dictionary.
if request.method == "GET" and len(request.GET) != 0:
#do stuff
> Hello,
>
> I need to test if the request.GET is empty or if it holds some variable.
> So if is empty I can redirect to a page, and if there is some variable
5 matches
Mail list logo