Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 7 years ago.
Improve this question
I'm a really tight schedule to code up a prototype for a website. I'm working with Django and am just starting out. Can you suggest open source Django snippets for the following:
1) A User Registration system (Registration/Authentication/Sessions)
2) A Rating System (Preferably a x/10 or 5 stars rating system)
3) A tags based search system
I'm really a noob and I need to get the version 1 out in 4 hours. So I'll just use open source code and modify it. I will make sure to keep the final version open sourced as well.
Check out the Pinax Project. That should cover #1 (OpenID) and #3 (tagging).
Your basic Django installation will provide users, authentication, and session handling right out of the box. For your user registration needs, you might consider django-registration. It's written by James Bennett, a well-respected Django contributor. For tagging, I've always used django-tagging.
I've never used a rating system in a Django application, but you might consider using django-ratings.
Good luck!
I never searched for your exact two examples, but django snippets is usually a really good place to start when looking for django code examples.
Related
Closed. This question needs to be more focused. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it focuses on one problem only by editing this post.
Closed 3 years ago.
Improve this question
I'm working on a development road map for a django project. My choosen IDE is pycharm pro and mock up tool is bootstrap studio. One of my criteria is a calendar and I have discovered that none of the existing public projects will meet my needs so I will have to create one from scratch (no problem). My typical approach would have been that the UI and the django project would be done in near parallel periodically merging and diverging the two. However, given the ability of the two software tools, I'm starting to think that that a better approach may be to do the UI first in BSS, next import the templates into the django project and finally perform the django dev to meet the needs of the UI.
The specific calendar functionality is not the issue here, this is a methodology question. While I know that there is a subjective answer to this question (which is not the "answer" I'm looking for here), there also has to be an objective answer as to why this would not work, or be the incorrect approach.
Doing the UI first is fine if you already know exactly what you want it to do and can specify that. Doing the Django first lets you play around with a working rough version and get a better feel for what works best before fine tuning the look and feel. Like you suggest, working on them both together will let each inform the other.
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 1 year ago.
Improve this question
I am working remotely with some colleagues on a Rmarkdown document, and I would like to make a simple review of the file (especially the comment part and not the code), and then send it back to others with my reviews embeded in the document, like a word document review or a kind of Overleaf review. I have made some research on the topic, but I didn't find something that feet my needs as explained. Please, Is there a way to add some review in a Rmakdown document and sent it back (either online or not)?
Take a look at Etherpad
Etherpad is a highly customizable Open Source online editor providing collaborative editing in really real-time.
Or, better: StackEdit
With StackEdit, you can share collaborative workspaces, thanks to the Google Drive synchronization mechanism. If two collaborators are working on the same file at the same time, StackEdit takes care of merging the changes.
Or, even better: HackMD
HackMD is a realtime, multiplatform collaborative markdown note editor.
This means that you can write notes with other people on your desktop, tablet or even on the phone.
I suggest you considering trackdown https://claudiozandonella.github.io/trackdown/
trackdown is an R package that offers a simple answer to collaborative writing and editing of R Markdown (or Sweave) documents. With trackdown, the local .Rmd (or .Rnw) file is uploaded as plain-text in Google Drive where, thanks to the easily readable Markdown (or LaTeX) syntax and the well-known online interface offered by Google Docs, collaborators can easily contribute to the writing and editing of the narrative part of the document. After integrating all authors’ contributions, the final document can be downloaded and rendered locally.
You can find more details at this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/68014082/12481476 or in the package documentation https://claudiozandonella.github.io/trackdown/
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
Which recent, public, medium-sized Ember.js applications do you recommend for learning about usage patterns by reading its implementations?
I'd recommend the Travis CI project - it uses Ember on the client side and Rail 3 on the server. While it doesn't use the latest Ember features it has very good foundations. You'll find the client-side code in a separate repo travis-web.
I also found reading through #ebryn's "New Twitter" helpful although it is older (Sproutcore 2) and smaller/simpler than Travis CI.
Update: Ember has gone through a number of big changes leading up to their 1.0 release so a lot of older example apps use deprecated APIs and are no longer representative of best practices. A new example to check out is Discourse (https://github.com/discourse/discourse) a large webapp built by Jeff Atwood and Robin Ward. Also, check out #trek's Ember Todos, a version of TodoMVC with a touch more process (https://github.com/trek/ember-todos-with-build-tools-tests-and-other-modern-conveniences)
I recommend the ToDoMVC project, which offers the same Todo application implemented using MV* concepts in most of the popular JavaScript MV* frameworks of today. Now ToDO MVC ember.js example adapts ember.js 1.0.rc1.
The website: http://todomvc.com/
The source: https://github.com/addyosmani/todomvc
Emberwatch has an Open Source Category with a list of interesting projects.
I recommend the http://www.embercasts.com/episodes/client-side-authentication-part-1 great to start with authentication.
And also it from smashing magazine http://coding.smashingmagazine.com/2013/11/07/an-in-depth-introduction-to-ember-js/
a good exercise is to put those apps to work in http://iamstef.net/ember-app-kit/ that has the current releases
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 7 years ago.
Improve this question
I'm trying to learn Django. And need something to go beyond Hello world and Polls tutorial. Could you please recomend any real project written in Django? Tried to search, but found not many.
Especialy interested in usage of buildout.
My project, Open Knesset, is a django based project that uses data scraped from the israeli parliament (the knesset), analyses it, and presents it to users in more friendly and informative ways.
We use buildout.
The main repo is here in github.
Another place you should look at is djangosites.org, they have a list of django powered sites with source code available.
Pinax and Satchmo is the two most popular django opensource project. You will learn alot beyond just hello world, especially best-practices.
You could try OSQA or Askbot. They are open source Stack Exchange clones and are Django projects, go to their sites (1) and (2) to see them in action.
I believe everything on the Django Packages site is open-source: Django Packages
List of the open-source Django projects:
https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/DjangoResources#Open-SourceDjangoprojects
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
While googling for it.I've stumbled upon html2wiki that seems to do the job(will try after done posting the Q up). But, other than that, there are many other choices popped out during the query session.
An word on which app to choose would be appreciated!
Thanks
I'm quite a fan of pandoc. The advantage is you learn one tool and then you can do lots of different kinds of conversions, fast.
This is the only one that has worked for me:
https://foliovision.com/seo-tools/pandoc-online
My use case was an HTML exported from EverNote which I needed to transfer into MediaWiki engine.
You could try HTML-WikiConverter
It can be done with marksy.arc90.com
Marksy is an online (or a Chrome Extension) that converts one markup
language to another in your browser.
Currently:
Input types supported
Markdown
Rst
Textile
Html
Mediawiki
Jira (confluence)
Github (gfm)
Outputs
Markdown
Rst
Textile
Html
Jira (confluence)
Googlecode
Jspwiki
Moinmoin
Trac
Mediawiki
Marksy even has an API available.
The best of three test was achieved by Seapine {Labs} HTML to Wiki Converter.
It uses AJAX to convert HTML source code to MediaWiki syntax.
The project documentation can be found here.