Check out the video tutorials on vimeo as well.
They're great
Regards
On Sat, Apr 18, 2020, 11:11 David Swarbrick wrote:
> Thank you for the encouragement, and the really useful resources
> identified.
>
> I think I have to work through the book, and where something really is not
>
Thank you for the encouragement, and the really useful resources identified.
I think I have to work through the book, and where something really is not
understandable (for me), keep going back a few pages and trying again.
David Swarbrick da...@swarb.co.uk - dsw...@gmail.com - swarb.co.uk Tel
Hi David
I have spent that last month and a half trying to learn web2py and python
and javascript (and css and sqlite and html). I reckon the official web2py
book has everything in it that you need. However my trouble was that my
knowledge about everything was so minimal that i often couldn't
Thank you. I will persist.
I used to tell my staff that the only daft question was the one unasked. I
may be providing a constant supply of evidence to the contrary.
On Friday, 17 April 2020 21:52:24 UTC+1, Christian Varas wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I think is better to start with *web2py*, is easy
Hi,
I think is better to start with *web2py*, is easy to learn and I believe
that fit better to your site, py4web is really good and more faster, but in
web2py you have more tools to do things.
The transition after from web2py to py4web is not difficult.
Cheers.
Chris.
El vie., 17 abr. 2020 a
I have a UK case law database presently viewable at swarb.co.uk. The output
is via WordPress. In better times we have had over 30k page views in a day.
Presently I maintain it entirely using an ancient MS Access database.
I need to move to a point where I have a sustainable and up to date
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