Previously Ian Bicking wrote:
Christoph Haas wrote:
On Freitag, 11. Juli 2008, Mike Orr wrote:
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 9:43 AM, rcs_comp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in html.tags the form function has 'POST' for the default method,
which is invalid xhtml. I changed it to:
def
On Freitag, 11. Juli 2008, Ian Bicking wrote:
Christoph Haas wrote:
I use method='post' everywhere in my code because uppercase attributes
aren't xhtml'ish. That reminds me that I wanted to open a ticket for
that
one. :)
Uppercase attribute... values? What does XHTML care about the
On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 6:18 PM, Mike Orr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
WebHelpers 0.6 final has been released. Just do:
$ easy_install -U WebHelpers
For now you'll have to read the docstrings in the source code for
documentation. I'm hoping these will be included online in the Pylons
On Sat, Jul 12, 2008 at 11:20 AM, Jorge Vargas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Today I sat down and wrote a patch to port simple_format to the new
HTMLBuilder, I have created a ticket for it. feedback is welcome, and
I hope it can be included in 0.6.1 or something.
in html.tags the form function has 'POST' for the default method,
which is invalid xhtml. I changed it to:
def form(url, method=post,...
and all is well.
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On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 9:43 AM, rcs_comp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in html.tags the form function has 'POST' for the default method,
which is invalid xhtml. I changed it to:
def form(url, method=post,...
and all is well.
Is it really? Does the browser convert it to POST before sending
On Freitag, 11. Juli 2008, Mike Orr wrote:
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 9:43 AM, rcs_comp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in html.tags the form function has 'POST' for the default method,
which is invalid xhtml. I changed it to:
def form(url, method=post,...
and all is well.
Is it really?
Christoph Haas wrote:
On Freitag, 11. Juli 2008, Mike Orr wrote:
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 9:43 AM, rcs_comp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in html.tags the form function has 'POST' for the default method,
which is invalid xhtml. I changed it to:
def form(url, method=post,...
and all is well.
So are applications actually breaking with form method=POST ? Or
is this an issue of formal correctness only?
--
Mike Orr [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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To
Mike Orr wrote:
So are applications actually breaking with form method=POST ? Or
is this an issue of formal correctness only?
Formal correctness of XHTML 1.0 strict only. Well, maybe if you serve
your content as XHTML 1.0 strict the browser might barf on that. But if
it does, it only
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 1:09 PM, Ian Bicking [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
XHTML is totally nutty.
I've been feeling better about XHTML since I started using DocBook.
I'm quite glad there's a simple XSLT transformation from DocBook -
XHTML to read the text without having to use a WYSIWYG editor (all
On Jul 11, 4:02 pm, Christoph Haas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I second rcs_comp (/me donates his parent a few bucks to give him a real
name).
Real name acquired. Please use Paypal to send me a few bucks, I will
make sure to send it on to my mother. ;)
Mike Orr wrote:
So are applications
Mike Orr wrote:
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 1:09 PM, Ian Bicking [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
XHTML is totally nutty.
I've been feeling better about XHTML since I started using DocBook.
I'm quite glad there's a simple XSLT transformation from DocBook -
XHTML to read the text without having to use
I'd like to share a use case with paginate.
I've got a model that serves query results in the format I need. It
manages starts and limits, includes [totalrow] property so I just need
paginate to draw a nice paging bar.
Everything works fine, but one line messes it up for me.
self.items =
Edit: I can access the original object by c.myobj.collection so that
pretty much does it but still.
On Jul 9, 3:30 pm, Pavel Skvazh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'd like to share a use case with paginate.
I've got a model that serves query results in the format I need. It
manages starts and
Hi, Pavel...
On Mittwoch, 9. Juli 2008, Pavel Skvazh wrote:
I'd like to share a use case with paginate.
I've got a model that serves query results in the format I need. It
manages starts and limits, includes [totalrow] property so I just need
paginate to draw a nice paging bar.
Everything
I'm not sure either. You've got a lot of use cases covered already.
Here's what i do:
collection = Companies.list(limit, start)
c.companies = h.Page(collection['items'], page, limit,
collection['total'])
return render('/portal/companies/companies.mako')
Then I've got
Getting the following error following the doc examples:
Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, Feb 21 2008, 13:11:45) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)]
on
win32
items = range(1,24)
import webhelpers.paginate
page2 = webhelpers.paginate.Page(items, page=2, items_per_page=10)
page2.pager()
Traceback (most recent
On Jul 9, 2008, at 8:49 AM, Garland, Ken R wrote:
Getting the following error following the doc examples:
Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, Feb 21 2008, 13:11:45) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
(Intel)] on
win32
items = range(1,24)
import webhelpers.paginate
page2 = webhelpers.paginate.Page(items, page=2,
On Wed, Jul 9, 2008 at 4:30 AM, Pavel Skvazh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'd like to share a use case with paginate.
I've got a model that serves query results in the format I need. It
manages starts and limits, includes [totalrow] property so I just need
paginate to draw a nice paging bar.
If
Great Job Mike, webhelpers is a fantastic tool!
But since you've removed the javascript stuff (which you really can't be
blamed for, I can only imagine how hard it is to keep up with the moving
target that is javascript libs) does anyone have a link_to_remote
equivalent that works with jquery?
On Jul 8, 2008, at 6:26 PM, Jose Galvez wrote:
Great Job Mike, webhelpers is a fantastic tool!
But since you've removed the javascript stuff (which you really
can't be
blamed for, I can only imagine how hard it is to keep up with the
moving
target that is javascript libs) does anyone have
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