Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Re: Django and Rails

Also, the community certainly doesn't seem to be fading to me -
between this list, SO and the IRC channel, there is lots of movement.

There is a new release every 6 months or so and the devs are pushing
security updates at about one every two months although that's more
dependent on when the security issues are discovered than running to a
plan.

I wouldn't fear the Django community disappearing anytime soon.

cheers
L.

On 29 May 2014 14:40, Lachlan Musicman <datakid@gmail.com> wrote:
> For db changes, you want South, although the author of South has just
> finished integrating it into Django 1.7.
>
> http://south.aeracode.org/
> http://south.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
> http://south.readthedocs.org/en/latest/tutorial/index.html
>
> Version 1.7 of Django, due any day now, will have migrations built in.
>
> cheers
> L.
>
> On 29 May 2014 13:55, Enrique Shadah <eshadah@startupblvd.com> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I am learning Django after trying once with Rails. As I am a newbie to
>> software development, Rails seemed more obscure and difficult to digest. I
>> chose to learn Django because Python is easier to understand than Ruby (at
>> least to me) and because I thought it had a bigger or more enthusiastic
>> community to learn from.
>>
>> However, I am finding that Django has some limitations Rails does not. One
>> is that its community is fading (or at least it feels that way). Another is
>> that Rails seems to be better at automating mundane tasks (staying true to
>> the DRY principle). For example, rake db migrate can add/subtract fields on
>> table without writing any sql. Django can add fields and tables with
>> syncdb, but if I need to subtract fields or change whether the field is
>> required or not, I am faced to writing sql. This seems pretty silly given
>> that new site is constantly changing, thus models will suffer many changes
>> as users suggest/reject features.
>>
>> These are just two limitations off the top of my head. I am sure Django is
>> awesome, but could anyone share their views on whether I should just learn
>> Rails off the bat instead of going the Django then Rails route?
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> The idea is that a beautiful image is frameable. Everything you need
> to see is there: It's everything you want, and it's very pleasing
> because there's no extra information that you don't get to see.
> Everything's in a nice package for you. But sublime art is
> unframeable: It's an image or idea that implies that there's a bigger
> image or idea that you can't see: You're only getting to look at a
> fraction of it, and in that way it's both beautiful and scary, because
> it's reminding you that there's more that you don't have access to.
> It's now sort of left the piece itself and it's become your own
> invention, so it's personal as well as being scary as well as being
> beautiful, which is what I really like about art like that.
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Adventure Time http://theholenearthecenteroftheworld.com/



--
The idea is that a beautiful image is frameable. Everything you need
to see is there: It's everything you want, and it's very pleasing
because there's no extra information that you don't get to see.
Everything's in a nice package for you. But sublime art is
unframeable: It's an image or idea that implies that there's a bigger
image or idea that you can't see: You're only getting to look at a
fraction of it, and in that way it's both beautiful and scary, because
it's reminding you that there's more that you don't have access to.
It's now sort of left the piece itself and it's become your own
invention, so it's personal as well as being scary as well as being
beautiful, which is what I really like about art like that.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adventure Time http://theholenearthecenteroftheworld.com/

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