>
> Creating a template tag [1] might be a good idea here, especially if
> you will be displaying a list of events on any other pages.
>
> In your view, you would have:
>
> future_events =
> Event.objects.filter(start_date__gte=now).sort_by('start_date')
> return render_to_response('clubs/events.h
On Jul 26, 1:22 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> In my view, I have:
> future_events = Event.objects.filter(start_date__gte=now)
> pacific_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Pacific')
> rocky_mountain_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Rocky
> Mountain
>
> I second the weirdness. I'd try tossing an
>
> assert False, len(future_events)
>
> immediately after the
>
> future_events = Event.objects.select_related().filter(...)
>
> statement to see what Django thinks it's bringing back for future
> events.
>
> > It wasn't anything to do with regi
>> events = {} # or SortedDict if order matters
>> + new_lists = 0
>> + appended_lists = 0
>> for event in future_events: # one DB hit here
>> - region = event.club.region
>> + region = str(event.club.region)
>> +if region in events:
>> + appended_lists += 1
>> +els
On Jul 26, 4:17 pm, Tim Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > AssertionError: {'Southeast': [],
> > 'Northeast':
> > [], 'Pacific': [ > show>],
> > 'Southwest': []}
>
> [aside: please use edited-down inline posting conventions rather
> than top-posting to make the conversation easier to follow]
>
> AssertionError: {'Southeast': [],
> 'Northeast':
> [], 'Pacific': [ show>],
> 'Southwest': []}
[aside: please use edited-down inline posting conventions rather
than top-posting to make the conversation easier to follow]
I'm not sure if just using "region" is being considered a unique
item (
AssertionError: {'Southeast': [],
'Northeast':
[], 'Pacific': [],
'Southwest': []}
On Jul 26, 3:45 pm, Tim Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>future_events = Event.object.filter(
> >> start_date__gte=now).select_related(
> >> ).order_by('start_date')
>
> >>events = {} # or So
>>future_events = Event.object.filter(
>> start_date__gte=now).select_related(
>> ).order_by('start_date')
>>
>>events = {} # or SortedDict if order matters
>>for event in future_events: # one DB hit here
>> region = event.club.region
>> ev_list = events.get(region
I'm probably doing something wrong in my template now, but that
version is only returning one event per region, and the order is
backwards. I tried .order_by('-start_date'), but it didn't appear to
make any difference.
On Jul 26, 3:12 pm, Tim Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > few minor questi
> few minor questions:
> missing )
> [(region, future_events.filter(club__region=region) for region in regions]
>
> guessing the missing ) goes here:
> [(region, future_events.filter(club__region=region)) for region in regions]
Yup...must have been my poor transcription from brain to email.
Sor
Thanks, Tim. I got tripped up by a punctuation, and only half
understood what you were doing, but it put me on the track. Here's
what I ended up with:
future_events = Event.objects.filter(start_date__gte=now)
regions = (
'Pacific',
'Rocky Mountain',
)
events = []
Tim Chase wrote:
>> In my view, I have:
>> future_events = Event.objects.filter(start_date__gte=now)
>> pacific_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Pacific')
>> rocky_mountain_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Rocky
>> Mountain')
>> southwest_events = future_events.fi
> In my view, I have:
> future_events = Event.objects.filter(start_date__gte=now)
> pacific_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Pacific')
> rocky_mountain_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Rocky
> Mountain')
> southwest_events = future_events.filter(club__region='Sout
I'm sure you all will immediately see what I'm doing, and how I could
be doing it better. I'm sure I need to create my own dict or
something, but I'm not sure how I'd do so, or (more importantly), how
I'd work with in the template.
In my view, I have:
future_events = Event.objects.filter(start_da
14 matches
Mail list logo