On Sun, 2008-03-23 at 11:15 -0400, Ned Batchelder wrote:
[...]
> Here's one of the tests in question:
>
> >>> f = forms.FilePathField(path=path)
> >>> f.choices.sort()
> >>> f.choices
> [('.../django/newforms/__init__.py', '__init__.py'),
> ('.../django/newforms/__init__.pyc', '__init__.pyc'
On Sun, 2008-03-23 at 16:49 -0700, Martin v. Löwis wrote:
> At the PyCon sprint, I started porting Django to Python 3.0. In the
> process, I had to make a number of changes to Python, so this port
> currently requires the Python 3.0 subversion head (soon to be released
> as 3.0a4).
>
> This port
Hey David,
Right now sql.Query doesn't output the HAVING clause, but if it did I think
you could do this with a custom filter with an add_to_query() method that
calls setup_joins and appends to query.having.
Also, with annotate() but without group_by(), as proposed, your query look
like:
>>> MyMod
I'm not familiar with PyUnit. How would it be easier?
--Ned.
Nick wrote:
> On Mar 23, 3:37 pm, Ned Batchelder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> That was my first instinct too, then I had to re-discover (for the
>> umpteenth time!) that normpath does not normalize a path to make it the
>> same a
On Sun, Mar 23, 2008 at 12:23 PM, Winsley von Spee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> perhaps I've just read over it, but how to you plan to handle not
> numeric types like datetime? In mysql you have to use something like
> "FROM_UNIXTIME(AVG(UNIX_TIMESTAMP(today))", but how should that be
> handled in
At the PyCon sprint, I started porting Django to Python 3.0. In the
process, I had to make a number of changes to Python, so this port
currently requires the Python 3.0 subversion head (soon to be released
as 3.0a4).
This port is just a start; it runs the tutorial with the sqlite3
backend, includ
Sorry -- I missed page 2. So GROUP BY and similar things will be
supported through an Aggregates base class?
On Mar 18, 6:36 pm, "Russell Keith-Magee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 9:26 AM, Justin Fagnani
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hey Nicolas,
>
> > It seems to be
So we're not going to support group by at all, even though is
extremely simple? I don't understand why everyone says mine (and
Curse's and many other peoples) use of SQL is so uncommon. I'd
guarantee almost every developer and I know who writes any kind of
scalable code (and I've seen what they've
On Mar 23, 3:37 pm, Ned Batchelder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That was my first instinct too, then I had to re-discover (for the
> umpteenth time!) that normpath does not normalize a path to make it the
> same across Python implementations: it normalizes the path to make it
> right for the platf
Hey, why am I wrong? :(
Instance caching isn't psychic, it just says "this foreign key was
queried for, use the hashtable". Do you want me to say for m in
instances: m.foreign = my_already_queried_value just so I can use it
in templates? If Im referencing this in a view, sure, I'll use the
prebui
10 matches
Mail list logo