El 03/09/10 17:09, mdipierro escribió:
there must be a typo in your code since element(xxx) just calls
elements(xxx)[0]. Please email a sample string a to reproduce the
problem. Google scrambled your message and I cannot check it.
On Sep 2, 2:25 am, b vivek<[email protected]> wrote:
Hii, I just hopped onto web2py. And it is just beautiful. I am going through
the book and am stuck up at one place.There is an example there:->>> a =
DIV</book/default/docstring/DIV>(DIV</book/default/docstring/DIV>(
DIV</book/default/docstring/DIV>('a', _id='target',_class='abc')))>>> d =
a.elements('div#target')
d[0] = 'changed'
print a
<div><div><div id="target" class="abc">changed</div></div></div>---(4)
Now when I try this in the shell.. I dont get the result as in 4. However
when I use a.element instead of a.elements , I get the result. Why should it
be so . Am I doing something really wrong.
Hi,
Probably this is quite offtopic, but I have to say it: I've been using
django for over two years now for three different projects, and I love
it, but as I'm an nonconformist I'm allways looking for new tools. I've
spent now several weeks looking to web2py, reading the book, viewing
powered by w2p sites, trying some examples, and reading this list.
I think it is REALLY GREAT to have mdipierro, the creator of the
framework answering any question here, even to somebody asking
"begginers questions". This is great.
Sorry for the offtopic.