I use a desktop at home and a laptop when I go attempting to hack in the
open community. The hack experiances always seem so messy to me. Most
recently I am trying to help with a project called SUMO but there are tons
of download requirements outside of the python and django. I have also
tri
Apologies Amirouche for the late reply.
The documentation is good, but I like many apparently(based on tutorials
for other envs) prefer a hands on approach to a documentary approach. This
is the place where Django doesn't have much depth in its ecosystem. It has
no current books and no hands on tu
2013/7/1 Sayth Renshaw
>
>
> On Monday, July 1, 2013, Tom Evans wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 11:37 AM, Sayth Renshaw
>> wrote:
>> > Is that good though?
>> >
>> > Barring 2 scoops there is no new material to recognise and guide users
>> to
>> > the new features of Django and to get beginne
On Monday, July 1, 2013, Tom Evans wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 11:37 AM, Sayth Renshaw
> >
> wrote:
> > Is that good though?
> >
> > Barring 2 scoops there is no new material to recognise and guide users to
> > the new features of Django and to get beginner Django developers on board
> > quic
On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 11:37 AM, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
> Is that good though?
>
> Barring 2 scoops there is no new material to recognise and guide users to
> the new features of Django and to get beginner Django developers on board
> quicker.
>
> It leads to bits of info for each python framework b
On Monday, July 1, 2013, Tom Evans wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 10:03 PM, Sayth Renshaw
> >
> wrote:
> > This is oddly the only value difference between rails and django is that
> > there is far more online courses and tutorials to say "come join rails".
>
> Yep, they say "come join rails", a
On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 10:03 PM, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
> This is oddly the only value difference between rails and django is that
> there is far more online courses and tutorials to say "come join rails".
Yep, they say "come join rails", and not "come join Ruby". This
encourages people to look fo
> Its a curious complaint you have. You don't want >to use the
>documentation since it doesn't document >something that you already
There's a misunderstanding here it's a) Not django docs but the opensource
django book. B) the book ends up describing over a vast area all the
possible different ins
Is there something that the Django documentation itself is lacking?
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/install/#installing-official-release
On Wednesday, 26 June 2013 16:56:49 UTC+10, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
>
> So I turned to the django book online, but have a lack of faith here as
> the
On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 2:19 PM, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
> Any thoughts?
First of all, there is no requirement to use either of those tools to
use django.
Its a curious complaint you have. You don't want to use the
documentation since it doesn't document something that you already
know about!
In r
On 06:19 Wed 26 Jun , Sayth Renshaw wrote:
> Any thoughts?
>
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Hi
I am looking for a resource that gives me that Knowledge I need to grasp and
understand Django.
For python I have learnt LPTHW and completed codeacademy and read the Magnus
lie Hetland book.
I have completed the Django polls tutorial, and I bought two scoops of Django.
Now I have read the
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