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Django 4 By Example

Django 4 By Example

By : Antonio Melé
4.7 (44)
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Django 4 By Example

Django 4 By Example

4.7 (44)
By: Antonio Melé

Overview of this book

Django 4 By Example is the 4th edition of the best-selling franchise that helps you build web apps. This book will walk you through the creation of real-world applications, solving common problems, and implementing best practices using a step-by-step approach. You'll cover a wide range of web app development topics as you build four different apps: A blog application: Create data models, views, and URLs and implement an admin site for your blog. Create sitemaps and RSS feeds and implement a full-text search engine with PostgreSQL. A social website: Implement authentication with Facebook, Twitter, and Google. Create user profiles, image thumbnails, a bookmarklet, and an activity stream. Implement a user follower system and add infinite scroll pagination to your website. An e-commerce application: Build a product catalog, a shopping cart, and asynchronous tasks with Celery and RabbitMQ. Process payments with Stripe and manage payment notifications via webhooks. Build a product recommendation engine with Redis. Create PDF invoices and export orders to CSV. An e-learning platform: Create a content management system to manage polymorphic content. Cache content with Memcached and Redis. Build and consume a RESTful API. Implement a real-time chat using WebSockets with ASGI. Create a production environment using NGINX, uWSGI and Daphne with Docker Compose. This is a practical book that will have you creating web apps quickly.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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18
Other Books You May Enjoy
19
Index

Using Django Debug Toolbar

At this point, you will already be familiar with Django’s debug page. Throughout the previous chapters, you have seen the distinctive yellow and grey Django debug page several times. For example, in Chapter 2, Enhancing Your Blog with Advanced Features, in the Handling pagination errors section, the debug page showed information related to unhandled exceptions when implementing object pagination.

The Django debug page provides useful debug information. However, there is a Django application that includes more detailed debug information and can be really helpful when developing.

Django Debug Toolbar is an external Django application that allows you to see relevant debug information about the current request/response cycle. The information is divided into multiple panels that show different information, including request/response data, Python package versions used, execution time, settings, headers, SQL queries, templates used, cache, signals...

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