Two Scoops of Django: Best Practices For Django 1.5

Posted By: Free butterfly

Two Scoops of Django: Best Practices For Django 1.5 by Daniel Greenfeld, Audrey M. Roy
English | April 16, 2013 | ISBN: 1481879707 | 312 pages | EPUB | 1.89 Mb

We'll introduce you to various tips, tricks, patterns, code snippets, and techniques that we've picked up over the years.
We have put thousands of hours into writing and revising its 300+ pages of concise, example-packed text.
What is everyone saying about Two Scoops of Django?
  • “A single read-through of Two Scoops of Django gave me so many lightbulbs and tips; I had to go back for a second helping.” – Lynn Root, Red Hat engineer and PyLadies ambassador.
  • Ha ha, I learned something in the first chapter. Awesome. – Zed Shaw, Author of Learn Python the Hard Way.
  • Two Scoops should provide some food for thought and usable recommendations for anybody using Django regularly. – Malcolm Tredinnick, Django Core Contributor
  • Make sure you have your favorite project next to you while reading. You'll be doing some rewriting. – Bryan Veloso, GitHubber, PyCon PH Keynote Speaker
  • If I could time travel, the first thing I'd do would be give my younger self a copy of this book, and make him read it. – Randall Degges, Passionate Python Hacker
  • You know those lessons you learn when projects blow up in your face? This book contains several projects worth of such lessons. – Lennart Regebro, author of "Porting to Python 3"
  • This book should prove to be an amazing resource for any new-to-Django developer that picks it up. – Kenneth Love, Creator of "Getting Started with Django"
  • No matter what your skill level is, Two Scoops has solid tips for everyone. – Jeff Triplett, Developer at Revsys
  • This is the book I wished had existed and I could have read when I started learning Django. – Barry Morrison, Linux systems engineer and Django developer
  • Two Scoops of Django is by far the best Django book I've read. – Ben Beecher on Twitter
  • Are there any negatives? Well yes. Only one: I wish I've read it earlier! – Branko Vukelic

Table of Contents
  • Chapter 1: Coding Conventions
  • Chapter 2: The Optimal Django Environment Setup
  • Chapter 3: How To Lay Out Django Projects
  • Chapter 4: Fundamentals of Django App Design
  • Chapter 5: Settings and Requirements Files
  • Chapter 6: Database/Model Best Practices
  • Chapter 7: Function-and Class-Based Views
  • Chapter 8: Best Practices for Class Based Views
  • Chapter 9: Common Patterns for Forms
  • Chapter 10: More Things To Know About Forms
  • Chapter 11: Building REST APIs in Django
  • Chapter 12: Templates: Best Practices
  • Chapter 13: Template Tags and Filters
  • Chapter 14: Tradeoffs of Replacing Core Components
  • Chapter 15: Working With the Django Admin
  • Chapter 16: Dealing with the User Model
  • Chapter 17: Django's Secret Sauce: Third-Party Packages
  • Chapter 18: Testing Chapter of Doom!
  • Chapter 19: Documentation: Be Obsessed
  • Chapter 20: Finding and Reducing Bottlenecks
  • Chapter 21: Security Best Practices
  • Chapter 22: Logging: Tips and Tools
  • Chapter 23: Signals: Use Cases and Avoidance Techniques
  • Chapter 24: What About Those Random Utilities?
  • Chapter 25: Deploying Django Projects
  • Chapter 26: How To Release Your Own Django Packages
  • Chapter 27: Closing Thoughts
  • Appendix A: Packages Mentioned In This Book
  • Appendix B: Troubleshooting

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