On Friday, June 28, 2013 3:47:51 PM UTC+2, Roberto López López wrote:
>
> Two scoops of django is also a good book https://django.2scoops.org/
>
>
> +1
Two scoops of django is great. This book have many good practices and also
very good reviews. You should definitely start it after you read
For me, Beginning Django E-commerce by James McGaw was very helpful! Hope
this helped you.
On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 8:08 PM, Mike Dewhirst wrote:
> On 28/06/2013 11:47pm, Roberto López López wrote:
>
>> Two scoops of django is also a good book https://django.2scoops.org/
On 28/06/2013 11:47pm, Roberto López López wrote:
Two scoops of django is also a good book https://django.2scoops.org/
+1
On 06/28/2013 03:45 PM, Gabriel wrote:
Hey, you could also try Getting Started With Djangorest, that's a
series of classes in everything you might need to become a
Two scoops of django is also a good book https://django.2scoops.org/
On 06/28/2013 03:45 PM, Gabriel wrote:
>
> Hey, you could also try Getting Started With Djangorest, that's a
> series of classes in everything you might need to become a Django dev.
>
> -Gabe
>
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The way I learned it was by reading the offical free django book. According
to me, the tutorial app does not teach you lot of django. The first chapter
8 chapter of the book will give you a solid understanding. Hope that thelps.
On Friday, June 28, 2013 2:35:17 AM UTC-5, subs...@gmail.com
Hi all,
I am very new to the world of Django and I have a couple questions
regarding "how to learn it?":
My background is .NET development, mostly developing business logic tiers.
I am very fluent with OOP, HTML5, CSS, JavaScript and have an entry-level
knowledge of Python. Still, I have no
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