Re: Getting into professional django development
Dear Dan,
[Reordering the message so that it is easier to see the connection.]
Am Dienstag, den 18.10.2011, 06:46 -0700 schrieb Dan Gentry:
> On Oct 18, 3:10 am, kenneth gonsalves <law...@thenilgiris.com> wrote:
> > On Tue, 2011-10-18 at 12:36 +0530, kenneth gonsalves wrote:
> > > On Mon, 2011-10-17 at 23:45 -0700, Kevin wrote:
> > > > Currently I have been focusing on the following:
> >
> > > > * Django 1.2
> >
> > > 1.3 belongs to the stone age - since you are learning, it would be a
> > > good idea to work with the current svn trunk, updating every week or
> > > so.
> > > --
> >
> > s/1.2/1.3/
> With all due respect to Mr. Gonsalves, I do not care to work with the
> Django trunk unless I'm just playing around with something. My goal
> is always to produce a production quality application. Even the more
> stable than average Django trunk cannot provide the consistency needed
> to deliver an app to a customer. Plus, I don't need the extra work of
> basing my code on a moving target. When trunk becomes v1.4, I will
> convert my applications and upgrade.
Please read the message you are referring to again. Kenneth corrected
the post [2] (although the `sed`-command should be `s/1.3/1.2/`. »The
latest official version is 1.3.1.« [1], so Kenneth suggested to use the
current stable release.
> I know - I'm a dinosaur.
That has nothing to do with this.
Thanks,
Paul
[1] https://www.djangoproject.com/download/
[2] http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Mailing_list_netiquette
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