Django CMS which is the best? [closed] - django

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Closed 11 years ago.
I read Djangos cms comparison page and it seems
http://www.django-cms.org/
may be what I was looking for.
Any experience with that? Recommendation?
Especially on how to install it. I cant find any installation info for it.
Apart from:
"Make sure that cms, mptt and publisher folders are on your pythonpath. They all should come with the distribution."
Or what is the best and easiest to install cms for django with the least dependencies?

I used Mezzanine. In general it works but I switched to Django-CMS now and am happier with it.
Here is a really straightforward way to get started: https://www.django-cms.org/en/documentation/

I had a similar problem and selected django-cms. FeinCMS looked attractive as well.
There is a pretty good tutorial for django-cms at: http://readthedocs.org/docs/django-cms/en/2.1.3/. The only drawback is that there is not about the deployment on the production environment. However, you should get it done by reading django documentation at: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/deployment/.

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Can i find a django web development Mentor here at Stackoverflow? [closed]

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Closed 9 years ago.
I am a beginner programmer not just in django development. Its getting more and more complicated and can't keep working solo.
Was wondering if its possible to find a django mentor here(stackoverflow), so many great developers here.
thank you.
This question will most likely get closed, but my suggestion would be this:
Learn these technologies in this order:
HTML
CSS
JavaScript
SQL
A server-side language. Python is probably the easiest to get started with. Check out Dive into Python
Call me old-fashioned, but I find that paper books are still easier to learn from than digital. For me, they are simply more tactile, and faster. If you just want to dive in head first, and you want to use Django, start with The Definitive Guide to Django, follwed by Practical Django Projects, then Django Testing finishing up with Pro Django.

Open Source customer review system in Django, or any other Python framework [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
I want to implement an opinion or customer review system, kind of Disqus, or comments for models in Django, with some extra work on processing this reviews.
I have been googling and searching in github for hours, some platform for working with customer reviews, opinions or comments.
Seems like there is a big controversy about comments native in Django. I have read many good, but many bad things so far.
I am wondering if some of you guys know something similar to Disqus but open source.
I am searching some open source platform, because there is a lot of work to do(in which actually I am working) based on processing the reviews and analyzing them and I wanted to cut off the time for developing from scratch the whole system for managing users and reviews, and focus on the text analytics part.
Any opinion is welcomed!
bests,
Luchux.
Take a look at askbot (disclaimer - I am co-founder and developer of the askbot project).
Askbot is a Q&A system like this site, only open source and more flexible and has better support of email. Our project is still work in progress but we are moving quite fast.

Django invite code app recommendation? [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
I'm looking for a simple Django app that restricts registration to users who have an invite code (for running a private beta). I'm using django-registration, so something that plays nicely with it would be great.
Looks like there are several viable options:
django-inviting
django-privatebeta
django-invite
Given the wealth of options, I'm wondering if people have found a particular app more flexible and/or easier to work with than the others? Are there other apps that I should be aware of?
You miss django-invitation which is really quickly integrated with django-registration.
I just had to hack it a bit to include the name of the inviter in the email message.
django-invitation is a good choice among the four.

looking for django app for collaborative Wiki [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
I've been trying to find a django wiki app, which has the following -
1.) WYSIWYG
2.) Attach files
3.) Revisions
I see moinmoin, but before going all in, wanted to see what you all have used.
List of Django Wiki projects:
http://djangopackages.com/grids/g/wikis/
The two leading candidates I can find are:
django-wikiapp
django-wiki
django-wikiapp looks a little more mature, and definitely supports revisions but does not seem to support attachments. WYSIWYG wouldn't be too tough to implement using something like TinyMCE or CKEditor. Attachments may be the sticking point.
There is also https://github.com/pinax/django-wakawaka which used in the pinax project. Editing attachments is not supported by the wiki itself but it is suggested to use django-attachments for this use case :)

which is the best django study book [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
There u a lot of book teaching django, I just don't know which one is the best, so can anybody give me an answer
I would recommend Practical Django Projects by James Bennett, it's really clear and practical.
Best is subjective and what books do you already know?
I would not buy a printed book. Information is changing too fast.
I find the official Django documentation pretty useful, then there is the Django book and the Django questions here on SO are useful too of course.
Also this blog (from one of the Django authors? I am not sure) gives some nice tipps and tricks.
I have found The Definitive Guide to Django Web Development Done Right, 2nd edition to be good.
The online official django tutorial and documentation is quite good.
Good book for start creating practical Django application:"Beginning Django Ecommerce"