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Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer

Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer

By : Dinder, Michael Dinder
4.2 (9)
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Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer

Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer

4.2 (9)
By: Dinder, Michael Dinder

Overview of this book

Django is a powerful framework but choosing the right add-ons that match the scale and scope of your enterprise projects can be tricky. This book will help you explore the multifarious options available for enterprise Django development. Countless organizations are already using Django and more migrating to it, unleashing the power of Python with many different packages and dependencies, including AI technologies. This practical guide will help you understand practices, blueprints, and design decisions to put Django to work the way you want it to. You’ll learn various ways in which data can be rendered onto a page and discover the power of Django for large-scale production applications. Starting with the basics of getting an enterprise project up and running, you'll get to grips with maintaining the project throughout its lifecycle while learning what the Django application lifecycle is. By the end of this book, you'll have learned how to build and deploy a Django project to the web and implement various components into the site.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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1
Part 1 – Starting a Project
5
Part 2 – Django Components
10
Part 3 – Advanced Django Components

Summary

By now, we have completed two major forms, one to act as the contact form and another to handle the vehicle object, created in Chapter 3, Models, Relations, and Inheritance. We added a variety of fields and discussed the differences between those field types. Using the email example over and over again as we did, we witnessed how validation works in many different ways. Depending on the requirements gathered for a project, we can then decide on several different writing patterns to align with those requirements. For example, if we wanted to completely eliminate the need for JavaScript validation, such as using my favorite library jQuery Validate, we could just write clean methods in form classes to perform all of the validation on the backend. This would use the power of Django to serve up the error messages. However, if we did use JavaScript-based validation on the frontend, we could write fields that create the node attributes for us, such as the <input> field attribute...

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