No, just single underscore

On Saturday, 11 January 2014 06:25:20 UTC-8, trojactory wrote:
>
> Juan,
>
> Are you entering double underscores like '__unicode__'?
>
> Cheers,
> Arun
>
> On Saturday, January 11, 2014 5:14:01 AM UTC+5:30, Juan Hu wrote:
>>
>> I have same problem with Django 1.6.1 and Python 2.7.5. I tried to 
>> restart interactive interpreter by exit() but it still doesn't work :(
>> Following the tutorial, for Python3 we use _str_ but I am using Python 
>> 2.7.5 so I use _unicode_.
>> Can anyone help to point out the problem and solution? Thanks!
>>
>> On Monday, 16 May 2011 05:32:41 UTC-7, maaz muqri wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi, 
>>> ____________________________________ 
>>> class Poll(models.Model): 
>>>     # ... 
>>>     def __unicode__(self): 
>>>         return self.question 
>>>
>>> class Choice(models.Model): 
>>>     # ... 
>>>     def __unicode__(self): 
>>>         return self.choice 
>>> ____________________________________ 
>>>
>>>
>>> after adding the above code also I am not able to retrieve the 
>>> question by the command: 
>>>
>>> I am getting this 
>>>
>>> >>>Poll.objects.all() 
>>> [<Poll: Poll object>] 
>>>
>>>
>>> instead of this 
>>>
>>> >>>Poll.objects.all() 
>>> [<Poll: What's up?>]
>>
>>

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