I'm really finding it very difficult to source practice problems for Django and its ORMs. I've heard Mosh's paid course has such exercises. I'm just getting started with Django mostly referring to youtube and its official documentation. I hope one of you who reads this could help me out.
I don't know if this is the right forum to ask.
Thanks in advance!
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I am studying his schema but got confused how and to whom "fromid" from link is making a relation with inside urllist? or it is a misprint ? Its chapter 4 Searching and Ranking and figure 4-1. My eyes gone blind for as i have read so much but could not able to understand even the purpose of "fromid".
Here is the Book link as: http://www.uploadmb.com/dw.php?id=1447327761
Please help Thanks.
xUnit++ isn't the same thing as xUnit, and google doesn't point me to any good documentation. The xUnit++ site has a Wiki, with about five pages of general stuff, but no real specifics and no tutorials.
Does anyone know of any relatively complete, or detailed, documentation of xUnit++. Also, if you know of any tutorials, that would be great!
Thanks!
At the moment, there isn't. I opened an issue about this on the author's homepage over a month ago. The link is here.
https://bitbucket.org/moswald/xunit/issue/13/tutorial-and-quick-start
It can be assumed that he's busy because good programmers are usually swamped.
I would suggest making a bitbucket account to comment on the issue, or asking the author to move his repository to something like GitHub, where the community would take care of the rest of the work for him.
It might be a little bit difficult because he is currently using mecurial for his version control.
Not much of an answer, but there are other people looking for the same information as you.
[Change 2016-05-10]
I started using The Catch Framework for doing unit test in C and C++ approximately 2 months after answering this question. It is fairly well documented and in active development on GitHub. It might be worth a try.
I recently learned about django-discussion. I don't know it may be a great application but I couldn't find any documentation, no example anywhere on the web.
Can somebody please guide me to the right direction? How can I integrate it with other application?
According to the lists of django forum applications here and here, there are better alternatives like django-threadedcomments, djangobb or pybbm - take a look.
Plus, django-discussion is not actively developed now.
Hope that helps.
I want to translate OSQA into my native language, but I'm a total newbie to Django.
I've seen that there are other questions here on SO relating 0SQA. (especially this one)
So if anyone could guide me how to accomplish this task. (I’ve done research before posting question here, but I didn’t find anything understandable)
Thank you for any answers, suggestions, tips.
You can install the rosetta package. Here are more informations and a simple step by step installation. http://meta.osqa.net/questions/11183/where-do-i-find-italian-rosetta-language-pack
A few colleagues and I created a simple packet capturing application based on libpcap, GTK+ and sqlite as a project for a Networks Engineering course at our university. While it (mostly) works, I am trying to improve my programming skills and would appreciate it if members of the community could look at what we've put together.
Is this a good place to ask for such a review? If not, what are good sites I can throw this question up on? The source code is hosted by Google Code (http://code.google.com/p/nbfm-sniffer) and an executable is available for download (Windows only, though it does compile on Linux and should compile on OS X Leopard as well provided one has gtk+ SDK installed).
Thanks, everyone!
-Carlos Nunez
UPDATE: Thanks for the great feedback, everyone. The code is completely open-source and modifiable (licensed under Apache License 2.0). I was hoping to get more holistic feedback, considering that my postings would still be very lengthy.
As sheepsimulator mentioned, GitHub is good. I would also recommend posting your project on SourceForge.net and/or FreshMeat.net. Both are active developer communities where people often peruse projects like yours. The best thing for your code would be if someone found it useful and decided to extend it. Then, you'd probably end up with plenty of bug fixes and constructive criticism.
You might get some mileage by posting the code out in the public space (through github or some other open-posting forum), putting a link here on SO, and seeing what happens.
You could also make it an open-source project, and see if people find it and use it.
Probably your best bet is to talk to your prof/classmates, find some professional programmers willing to devote their time, and have them review the code. Like American Idol-esque judging, but for your software...
As #Noah states, this is not the site for code review. You may present problems and what you did to overcome those problems, asking if a given solution would be the best.
I found a neat little website that might be what you are looking for: Cplusplus.com