On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 11:42 AM, Edward Armes
wrote:
> HI guys,
>
> Thanks for your responses, they have indeed answered all my questions
> pretty much as I was mainly looking for information on how to modify how
> Django accesses it's ORM layer. However from your answer it seems that it
> would
Hi Russell,
Thank you for your response it has mainly answered my questions as well as
given me areas to think about where to insert the asynchronous layer.
Edward
On Tuesday, 11 November 2014 21:25:44 UTC, Russell Keith-Magee wrote:
>
> Hi Edward,
>
> On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 12:30 AM, Edward
HI guys,
Thanks for your responses, they have indeed answered all my questions
pretty much as I was mainly looking for information on how to modify how
Django accesses it's ORM layer. However from your answer it seems that it
would be better that I do it at the model layer. I apologize for being s
Very nicely explained.
On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 2:55 AM, Russell Keith-Magee <
russ...@keith-magee.com> wrote:
> Hi Edward,
>
> On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 12:30 AM, Edward Armes
> wrote:
>
>> Hi there,
>>
>> I am currently looking at Django for a personal project. While I
>> understand how a lot of
Hi Edward,
On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 12:30 AM, Edward Armes
wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I am currently looking at Django for a personal project. While I
> understand how a lot of it works I can't wrap my head around how the actual
> DB querying is done specifically what part of Django actually looks at
Hi there,
I am currently looking at Django for a personal project. While I understand
how a lot of it works I can't wrap my head around how the actual DB
querying is done specifically what part of Django actually looks at the
database (I'm not talking about Manager, Models or Querysets, but the
On Sat, Feb 14, 2009 at 4:15 PM, Jack Orenstein wrote:
>
> I'm trying to understand how Django 1.0 handles connections. This is
> from the django docs, on the subject of raw SQL:
>
> from django.db import connection
> cursor = connection.cursor()
> cursor.execute("select ...")
> r
I'm trying to understand how Django 1.0 handles connections. This is
from the django docs, on the subject of raw SQL:
from django.db import connection
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute("select ...")
row = cursor.fetchone()
If I have a Django app running lots of re
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