YouTube and Python
According to Guido Van Rossum, YouTube is written almost entirely in Python.
Bring out the g33k
According to Guido Van Rossum, YouTube is written almost entirely in Python.
In this part of the series we’re going to take a step back from SQLAlchemy and have a look at making the user experience a little more fluid. We’re going to convert all our hand-coded forms to widgets, and we’re also going to use widgets as a display mechanism.
Due to my current workload the SimpleBlog series has slowed to a crawl. Have no fear, it is not dead, merely sleeping.
I expect the next part of the series to be published before the end of next week. Sorry for the delay! :)
For those that aren’t up on the the news, MacHeist has officially started. I can’t really divulge much information about the site itself as it’s shrouded itself in mystery, but I can say this: It’s quite a lot of fun. :)
I have 7 invites on my account to give away and one will go to each of the first 7 people who comment on this post who express an interest in getting their grubby mitts on one. Note, that you’ll want to have a Mac to take advantage of your account… but that’s probably quite obvious from the name of the site, right?
Welcome to part 3 of the SimpleBlog series, where we shall be looking at SQLAlchemy’s many-to-many relationships.
Since the end of part 2 I have done some work on the “admin” side of things with a way to create posts and comments via a web interface rather than tg-admin shell. While I’m sure that asking your visitors to log in via SSH and use the shell would have gone down well, I think that this way is a little easier. :)
You can download the code from here. Continue Reading »