Links given for first two parts of audio Books in Audio Book section. Balance parts will be shortly given-- With warm regardsP K KothariDownload PowerPoint Presentation files:
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The technology formerly known as Rendezvous, yes. When you start a
turbogears project with start-projectname.py, tg tells Bonjour of its
existence and you can view it simply by pulling it down from the
Bonjour menu in Safari's Bookmarks Bar. If the project is stopped, the
site is removed from Bonj
Hi,
I've now got a Solaris 10 sparc buildbot slave up and running at:
http://www.python.org/dev/buildbot/community/all/
It is running the django trunk tests against both python 2.5 and
python trunk using a sqlite3 memory database.
Are any of the core developers interested in receiving test fai
You're probably going to have to elaborate a bit further. What
exactly is "bonjour support" ? Does it have anything to do with the
technology formerly known as Rendezvous in OS X (more commonly known
as ZeroConf)?
--
Clint Ecker | STONE WARD
440 N. Wells, Suite 750, Chicago, IL 60610
Boston | [
On Tue, 2006-10-17 at 09:54 +1000, Malcolm Tredinnick wrote:
[...]
> And my apologies to use, JP:
Hmm ... should have been "my apologies to *you*...". One day I really
will have to sit down and learn this English language thing (and maybe
take some kind of "how to type" class).
Malcolm
--~--~
One thing I really love about TurboGears, that would make developing in
Django that much sweeter, would be Bonjour support. It looks like a
pretty trivial piece of code in TurboGears's startup.py file, but I'm
extremely new to Django and wouldn't know where to start adding it
myself.
--~--~-
Hi Adrian,
On 17/10/06, Adrian Holovaty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I've refactored Django's setup.py so that it uses the plain Python
> distutils installation method rather than ez_setup/setuptools. This
> means it no longer requires an Internet connection to install Django.
> Hoo
On Mon, 2006-10-16 at 14:53 +, JP wrote:
> James Bennett wrote:
> > On 10/13/06, Jay Parlar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > I know it's off-topic, but do you have any thoughts as to which
> > > branch?
> >
> > Based on my sporadic glances, I'd agree with you that row-level perms
> > and mult
On Mon, 2006-10-16 at 20:11 +, ogghead wrote:
> Thanks, Tom. (This is Matt, following up on the dev list.)
>
> The issues we're seeing with your latest Oracle patch on top of Django
> 0.95 do mostly pertain to a syncdb. Specifically, it looks as though
> Oracle's 30-character limit on most
OS X 10.3.9 with Python 2.4.3 seems fine.
Jay P.
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WinXP, Python 2.43 - worked OK for me. Dropped all the goodies into c:\python24\lib\site-packages\django...-joeOn 10/16/06,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Didn't work for me on Windows XP with python 2.4.3...what I got isthis:> C:\Documents and Settings\floguy\Desktop\newdjango>setup
Didn't work for me on Windows XP with python 2.4.3...what I got is
this:
> C:\Documents and Settings\floguy\Desktop\newdjango>setup.py install
> running install
> > running build
> running build_py
> running build_scripts
> creating build
> creating build\scripts-2.4
> copying and adjusting djang
On 10/16/06, Adrian Holovaty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But I have only tested this on Linux, so I'd appreciate it if folks
> could test out the command "python setup.py install" on various
> different platforms. Just grab the SVN version of Django and try
> installing it using "python setup.py
On 10/16/06, Adrian Holovaty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> But I have only tested this on Linux, so I'd appreciate it if folks
> could test out the command "python setup.py install" on various
> different platforms. Just grab the SVN version of Django and try
> installing it using "python setup.p
Hi all,
I've refactored Django's setup.py so that it uses the plain Python
distutils installation method rather than ez_setup/setuptools. This
means it no longer requires an Internet connection to install Django.
Hooray!
But I have only tested this on Linux, so I'd appreciate it if folks
could t
James Bennett wrote:
> On 10/16/06, gabor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> would you use something in the db? (from what i know about transactions
>> (very little :), they "solve" the potential conflicts by simply
>> reporting an error-condition to one of the "writers", so then he has to
>> retry. bu
On 10/16/06, gabor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> would you use something in the db? (from what i know about transactions
> (very little :), they "solve" the potential conflicts by simply
> reporting an error-condition to one of the "writers", so then he has to
> retry. but is there some simply (mul
James Bennett wrote:
> For truly critical
> operations, I'd probably just go ahead and grab an exclusive lock on
> whatever I needed, and force other transactions to wait.
how would you that?
would you use something in the db? (from what i know about transactions
(very little :), they "solve"
On 10/16/06, Thomas Steinacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It did not help with the code I posted that was using get_or_create(),
> because I didn't use unique_together... I don't think it would help
> with the money-transfer code.
This is a tricky problem, not least because each of the DBs we s
On 10/16/06 20:27, DavidA wrote:
>
> Steven Armstrong wrote:
>> Have you got a folder/file named 'data' in your apaches document root?
>> If so, try nuking or renaming it.
>
> No. And no virtual directories or aliases named 'data' either, nor a
> file or folder named 'data' in my django project
Thomas Steinacher wrote:
> gabor wrote:
>> Thomas Steinacher wrote:
>>> I already included
>>> "django.middleware.transaction.TransactionMiddleware" in my
>>> MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES (as described on
>>> http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/transactions/#tying-transactions-to-http-requests)
>>> a
Thanks, Tom. (This is Matt, following up on the dev list.)
The issues we're seeing with your latest Oracle patch on top of Django
0.95 do mostly pertain to a syncdb. Specifically, it looks as though
Oracle's 30-character limit on most identifiers is not taken into
account, so some constraint de
gabor wrote:
> Thomas Steinacher wrote:
> > I already included
> > "django.middleware.transaction.TransactionMiddleware" in my
> > MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES (as described on
> > http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/transactions/#tying-transactions-to-http-requests)
> > and it didn't help.
> >
>
> y
Waylan Limberg wrote:
> My guess is the problem lies in your Apache settings. Post a copy of
> your mod-python settings and we'll see what we come up with.
Here you go (C:/pf/src/pfweb is the Django project directory):
NameVirtualHost *
ServerName web
DocumentRoot "C:/pf/src/pfweb"
Thomas Steinacher wrote:
> On Oct 16, 2006, at 8:46 PM, gabor wrote:
>>> What, if two Django processes transfer money from account A to account
>>> B simultaneously?
>> these situations are (afaik) handled using transactionssimply start
>> a transaction at the beginning, and commit/rollback at
On Oct 16, 2006, at 8:46 PM, gabor wrote:
> > What, if two Django processes transfer money from account A to account
> > B simultaneously?
>
> these situations are (afaik) handled using transactionssimply start
> a transaction at the beginning, and commit/rollback at the end...
I already incl
On 10/16/06, DavidA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I noticed an inconsistency between the request META information in the
> modpython handler versus the base handler.
>
> I'm opening the URL http://web/data/pos/ which goes through two URL
> conf's:
>
> The default urls.py for the applicati
DavidA wrote:
> But under mod_python, request.META['PATH_INFO'] is '/pos/' while in the
> development server its '/data/pos/' (which I think is right).
I notice the same problem here. Running Apache 2.0.58-r2 and mod_python
3.1.4-r1 on a gentoo box.
for instance :
I'm not using this variabl
On 16/10/06, James Bennett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> SQLite is *not* something to be using if proper locking and safe
> concurrent access will be important; SQLite's own docs point out a
> couple of cases where its locking just won't work, and they recommend
> moving to a client-server RDBMS
On 10/16/06, Thomas Steinacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is my setup:
>
> - Django (SVN) running with "python manage.py runfcgi method=prefork"
> (there are 6 processes running)
> - Lighttpd
> - SQLite
SQLite is *not* something to be using if proper locking and safe
concurrent access will
Thomas Steinacher wrote:
> I know that in this specific case it can be enforced at database level
> using the unique and unique_together properties, but how would you
> handle e.g. this scenario?
>
> 1 def transfer_money(from_id, to_id, amount)
> 2from = models.BankAccount.objects.get(id=fr
Hello,
I was recently using the get_or_create method and noticed that it added
an entry twice into my database in very rare cases, because it
complained later that "get() returned more than one ___ -- it returned
2!". This problem didn't occur when using the development server.
My question is: I
Steven Armstrong wrote:
> Have you got a folder/file named 'data' in your apaches document root?
> If so, try nuking or renaming it.
No. And no virtual directories or aliases named 'data' either, nor a
file or folder named 'data' in my django project directory.
Note that the page URL is working
On 10/16/06 20:13, DavidA wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I noticed an inconsistency between the request META information in the
> modpython handler versus the base handler.
>
> I'm opening the URL http://web/data/pos/ which goes through two URL
> conf's:
>
> The default urls.py for the application:
> (r'
Hi,
I noticed an inconsistency between the request META information in the
modpython handler versus the base handler.
I'm opening the URL http://web/data/pos/ which goes through two URL
conf's:
The default urls.py for the application:
(r'^data/', include('pfweb.core.urls')),
And the urls.p
James Bennett wrote:
> On 10/13/06, Jay Parlar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I know it's off-topic, but do you have any thoughts as to which
> > branch?
>
> Based on my sporadic glances, I'd agree with you that row-level perms
> and multi-db both look like good candidates to be finalized and
> m
Tom Zellman wrote:
> I know one of the setbacks for some of the core developers/committers is
> that they don't have an Oracle license to test with. The database I use at
> work is located on a Solaris machine, and I'm stuck doing development on a
> Windows hard-drive-encrypted laptop... so I use
Mikhail Gusarov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> [accidentally posted in django-users first, please comment in
> django-developers]
>
> I'd like to propose the following change to Model interface: optional
> step to fixup the data got from the form before validation. This may
> easily be done in custom views
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