I plan to! When ready, I'd like to try and apply these styles
https://almsaeedstudio.com/themes/AdminLTE/pages/forms/general.html 
to the new form.py and perhaps
https://almsaeedstudio.com/themes/AdminLTE/pages/tables/data.html
to the new grid.py

On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 10:22:32 PM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>
> I am linking this from the new examples app. I assume you will be 
> maintaining it. for a while. :-)
> On Wednesday, 23 March 2016 19:38:22 UTC-5, Michael Beller wrote:
>>
>> Are you using 2.14.1 beta?
>>
>> I would try to get it running without changes before making changes 
>> (unless you have a need to get it running on an old version of web2py).  As 
>> Massimo pointed out, it's not necessarily backward compatible but other 
>> than removing host_names (which I already did in the repo) I don't see why 
>> it wouldn't work on an older version (I also had to remove formstyle from 
>> appconfig to support an older version).
>>
>> I just installed a clean version using 
>> git clone https://github.com/mjbeller/web2py-starter.git starter
>> into 2.14.1 beta (actually current master) and then accessed
>> /initialize/adminuser 
>> <http://127.0.0.1:8000/starter2/initialize/adminuser> 
>> to setup Admin user and auth_groups and everything worked fine.
>>
>> I'm still getting an odd error on 2.13.x which I can't figure out but I'm 
>> content to move forward with just 2.14.1
>>
>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 8:02:51 PM UTC-4, Ron Chatterjee wrote:
>>>
>>> Got it. As always, thank you Massimo. 
>>>
>>> I changed in db1.py
>>>
>>> auth.define_tables(username=True, signature=True)
>>>
>>> to 
>>> auth.define_tables(username=False, signature=True)
>>>
>>> But in  the log in it still ask me for user name. 
>>>
>>> Also I get an error when I try to register.
>>>
>>> pydal\helpers\classes.py", line 18, in __init__
>>>     return self.__dict__.__init__(*args, **kwargs)
>>> TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not iterable
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 7:32:18 PM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro 
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> You cannot do that. You have an app created with web2py 2.14.1 beta and 
>>>> run it with an older version of web2py. myconf.get is not defined.
>>>> We only offer backward compatibility, not forward compatibility.
>>>>
>>>> Massimo
>>>>
>>>> On Wednesday, 23 March 2016 18:12:58 UTC-5, Ron Chatterjee wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I copied the config file from private and changed this to db1.py.
>>>>>
>>>>> auth = Auth(db, host_names=myconf.get('host.name'))
>>>>>
>>>>> I still don't get the app running. Any suggestions?
>>>>>
>>>>> web2py version running: 2.12.3
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 6:36:34 PM UTC-4, Dave S wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 3:01:24 PM UTC-7, Literate Aspects 
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi Rimas,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I thank you for the kind thoughts, but I simply don't have that 
>>>>>>> luxury.  I read and I listen to the video tutorials, IF they matched 
>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>> current live app, then following the step by step instructions would be 
>>>>>>> straight forward, but the live app does not match the instructions, so 
>>>>>>> at 
>>>>>>> each step, one has to FIGURE out an unknown.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> The only difference I recognized in the screen shots was that the 
>>>>>> book had 1 more line in the header comment.  The code lines you showed 
>>>>>> seemed to match.  But recognize that the code included in the Welcome 
>>>>>> app 
>>>>>> (which is the code that gets used if you pressed the "Make new App" 
>>>>>> button 
>>>>>> on the Web2Py "console" page) can get changed every release; the book 
>>>>>> tends 
>>>>>> not to change as often.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Some of these changes are simplification, some are taking advantage 
>>>>>> of new features, and some are corrections.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Going back to one of your earlier questions:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> def index(): return "Hello from MyApp"
>>>>>>
>>>>>> differs from 
>>>>>>
>>>>>> def index(): return dict(message="Hello from MyApp")
>>>>>>
>>>>>> in a basic Python way ... the first returns a string, the second 
>>>>>> returns a dictionary object, where the key "message" has the value 
>>>>>> "Hello 
>>>>>> from MyApp:, which is a string.  The generic views that come with Web2Py 
>>>>>> know how to render a string.  They also know how to render values 
>>>>>> retrieved 
>>>>>> from a dictionary.  Just about everything else is a special case of 
>>>>>> those 2 
>>>>>> basic capabilities.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The BEAUTIFY() helper Rimas mentioned is something that gets executed 
>>>>>> on the server (in rendering the views) to generate HTML that shows 
>>>>>> what's 
>>>>>> in the object given as it's argument.  If that argument is a dictionary 
>>>>>> like the above, it will render a short table showing the key ("message") 
>>>>>> and its value ("Hello From MyApp").
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Chapter 2 covers some Python basics, and general Python tutorials and 
>>>>>> books are available elsewhere.  If you're totally new to programming, 
>>>>>> than 
>>>>>> you may want to spend some time on those.  If you're used to C or C# or 
>>>>>> Java, Chapter 2 may be enough to get you started.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Good luck!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> /dps
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>

-- 
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- http://web2py.com/book (Documentation)
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