On Saturday, 8 August 2015 02:38:09 UTC+10, Patryk Zawadzki wrote:
>
> 2015-08-07 16:51 GMT+02:00 Martin Owens >:
>
> > Could we use something simple like 'update()' and 'commit()' to which
> save
> > would call both?
>
> Or `.apply()` and `.commit()` not to suggest that the form gets
> update
The idea sounds awesome. A couple of corner cases that should be taken in
consideration:
- I think it is common for small simple projects (and people doing the
tutorial) to have the sqlite db file in the same project directory. If
we're watching for writes in every file in the project directory,
This all makes sense to me, but it would be nice if it worked out of the
box, especially for the purposes of the tutorial. :)
On Saturday, August 8, 2015 at 5:53:32 PM UTC-4, Aymeric Augustin wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> While writing some horrific code [1] related to the development server’s
> auto-re
Hi All,
I really like the "don't use this on new code, but there's no rush in
replacing it" category. I think that's really important to have that in a
project that's this old. I think it would be great to minimize the amount
required changes that need to be done.
Thanks,
Collin
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On Sunday, August 9, 2015 at 2:54:06 AM UTC+2, ghanshyam dudhatra wrote:
>
>
>
>
> HOBBIES
>
>
> Drawing
>
On Saturday, August 8, 2015 at 11:53:32 PM UTC+2, Aymeric Augustin wrote:
>
> - It doesn’t survive a syntax error in the settings module. I have reasons
> to believe that this would be extremely messy to fix.
> - If a module reads a configuration file on disk at startup and caches it,
> the aut
Hi Aymeric,
While I have wondered from time to time why runserver could not just
continue after certain syntax errors, and wished it could do so, I think
what you are proposing makes a lot of sense. I think having to manually
reload after installing a new package is really acceptable (and more an