And don't forget the '?' character
test = urlfetch.fetch('http://yourappid.appspot.com/check?'+check)
2009/1/19 Gipsy Gopinathan gipsy.ra...@gmail.com:
I think you have to use the absolute path in your fetch call
ie test = urlfetch.fetch('http://yourappid.appspot.com/check'+check)
Are you trying to run this from the SDK? If so, the SDK cannot serve
more than one request at a time.
A workaround is described in the documentation:
http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/python/tools/devserver.html#Using_URL_Fetch
On Jan 19, 12:54 pm, ehmo disku...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey guys,
And, even if you're trying to do it in a deployed version, there's no
guarantee that the second call will be processed by the same
interpreter. In fact, I think that you're guaranteed that the second
call will be processed by a different interpreter.
On Jan 19, 1:07 am, Alexander Kojevnikov
I think you have to use the absolute path in your fetch call
ie test = urlfetch.fetch('http://yourappid.appspot.com/check'+check)
On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 7:54 PM, ehmo disku...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey guys,
i'm trying to do something like this
class check(webapp.RequestHandler):
def