I have a problem in django ....I've posted my problem in the following link...pls have a look and try to provide me the solution...I'll be so much thankful
I am new to Django. I made a folder named templates in my project and "base.html" inside it, it works fine. But when I make new folder inside templates welcome and then "home.html" and I write some lines of code in my views.py file as
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response
def hello(re...
My mom still has a notebook next to the computer which tells her how to open a web browser, navigate to hotmail(!) and enter her username and password....
Or at least she did a few months ago.
She might have advanced a little since she got a Kindle.
Although, with all the dust/grime that gets caked on the inside of these machines ... Sometimes I wonder if a periodic vacuum cleaning would be a good idea...
my father being a cobol dev says I don't need a new laptop as people 20 years ago had wait a whole day before getting to compile their code or my code is shit (he's never seen a line of code of mine)...
It makes sense. With all the garbage that kids put on there ... what teenager wants their parents to see pictures of them completely trashed at last weekend's party?
Of course, supposedly, employers have started looking at that stuff too ...
I loved using Google products until I came to my senses and realized that integrating all my online services through one company is a potential room for disaster; so, I unhappily use Firefox a....lot
@BishnuBhattarai what happened to your problem? I think it's still there :)
@BishnuBhattarai have you added that folder into the TEMPLATE_DIR in your settings.py file? Try that and in your code, just call the file directly.I think that should work.
I am currently writing a python script to display all name of all the python files in a package and also all the name of the class a file contains.
scenario
#A.py
class apple:
.
.
class banana:
.
.
# Extracting_FilesName_className.py
f=open("c:/package/A.py','r') ...
gertvdijk is commenting on my question and he is saying that the 1.6 version may cause that problem ? What is about that version ? Once see that comment.
I am doing in eclipse and I restarted many times eclipse. I am trying it for 4 hours
Its part of my job, I have to be able to translate languages, not so much speak them. I'm so used to seeing certain languages that I can almost read them perfectly
Here's a security tip. Half the time, lie about the weather conditions in your local area. That way, Internet detectives can't cross-reference your comments with weather databases to determine your location.
Did I say raining? I meant monsooning, we get them all the time on this isolated island in the Pacific ocean ;;>_>
@Kneel-Before-ZOD "Have you sought help?" That's a whole other conversation...
@Kneel-Before-ZOD But I assume you mean my app, not my mental health. Yah, I've done some reading. There isn't much available about unit testing and Android's version of JUnit.
I really need to get my automated tests working correctly in order to continue. I have a lot of tests that don't past. I know some of them don't pass because the tests themselves are broken. Others might fail because the production code is broken. I need to figure out which is which...and that's kind of a pain in the butt.
Besides, I've been away from it long enough that I'm not entirely sure where I left off. I probably should sit down and take an inventory on what's what.
@Kneel-Before-ZOD Hey, I didn't say that I haven't written any code for 2 months...I have half a dozen other projects in the oven. Just not any other Android apps ATM.
@Andy yeah - there was a huge discussion that escalated into why Python allows that if they're not valid identifiers in functions, and why does setattr allow non-identifier thingies and other bits...
And I believe the outcome was that CPython checks it's a string, but not if it's a valid identifier for efficiency, but technically it should, so it shouldn't really work, but does (or something)
I think the conclusion is - it does work, but it shouldn't, but no one's really bothered enough to fix it, as although it's broken, it'd break too much stuff to fix it, or whatever
@Code-Guru: ImportError: no module named google.appengine.api
(this is not the problem when I run the code locally through appengine launcher, because this import statement was used in earlier steps, and it worked fine)
@Moberg ahh...then you probably can't run it from the command-line...unless you can download that module directly to your computer.
I've never used appengine. I suspect that you have to use the appengine launcher rather than the python command-line interpreter if you are using appengine modules.
I am currently writing a python script to display all name of all the python files in a package and also all the name of the class a file contains.
scenario
#A.py
class apple:
.
.
class banana:
.
.
# Extracting_FilesName_className.py
f=open("c:/package/A.py','r') ...
"App Engine 500 (Internal Server Error) almost always means that your Python code threw an unhanded exception that was caught by the runtime. When it catches one, it returns a 500 for the response." I just need to find the "unhanded exception" somehow..
Sounds like you have a disobedient python, put it in a cage with another python and whoever the winner is is who you should keep. It usually solves python problems. Either the disobedient one dies or it learns its lesson.
with open("Catalog File.txt") as f:
path = f.readline()
for (path, dirs, files) in os.walk(path):
for search_file in files:
if fnmatch.fnmatch(search_file, tapeList):
filename = os.path.join(root, basename)
print filename
import os
import fnmatch
with open("Catalog File.txt") as f:
path = f.readline()
for (path, dirs, files) in os.walk(path):
for search_file in files:
if fnmatch.fnmatch(search_file, "*.txt"):
filename = os.path.join(path, search_file)
print filename
Works well enough for me, finds all the text files in my directory.