forked from LeCoupa/awesome-cheatsheets
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
django.py
120 lines (93 loc) · 7.31 KB
/
django.py
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
# *****************************************************************************
# CODING STYLE > MAKING YOUR CODE READABLE
# *****************************************************************************
# 1. Avoid abbreviating variable names.
# 2. Write out your function argument names.
# 3. Document your classes and methods.
# 4. Comment your code.
# 5. Refactor repeated lines of code into reusable functions or methods.
# 6. Keep functions and methods short. A good rule of thumb is that scrolling
# should not be necessary to read an entire function or method.
# TIP: Use Flake8 for Checking Code Quality.
# *****************************************************************************
# CODING STYLE > THE WORD ON IMPORTS
# *****************************************************************************
# Imports should be grouped in the following order:
# 1. Standard library imports.
# 2. Core Django imports.
# 3. Third-party app imports.
# 4. Imports from your apps.
# Use explicit relative imports.
# Avoid using import *
# *****************************************************************************
# CODING STYLE > OTHERS
# *****************************************************************************
# Use underscores in URL pattern names rather than dashes.
# *****************************************************************************
# CODING STYLE > DATABASE
# *****************************************************************************
# 1.Register your app in admin file in your app folder to use admin panel in django
# 2.Create a superuser using command python manage.py createsuperuser
# 3.Remember to migrate after you change anything in your models.py file
# 4.Use /admin/ page to add data in your tables for testing purpose
# *****************************************************************************
# Deployment
# *****************************************************************************
# add your media, database, venv, __pycache__ to the .gitignore (there is a compelete list that you can find here: https://github.com/jpadilla/django-project-template/blob/master/.gitignore)
# keep migration files in the git (you will need to migrate them in target server)
# don't run "makemigrations" in the target server (you will need to just run "migrate")
# $ pip freeze > requirements.txt
# make appropriate changes in your project settings.py file (change DEBUG to False and etc)
# push your code to your git-server
# pull your code in your target server
# give right permissions to the web-server (e.g. $ chown www-data:www-data -R /var/www/myproject)
# make a new venv in the target server and activate it
# $ sudo pip install -r requirements.txt
# sudo ./venv/bin/python3 manage.py migrate
# restart your web-server (in case of apache: $ sudo service apache2 restart)
# *****************************************************************************
# DJANGO-ADMIN
# *****************************************************************************
django-admin check # Checks the entire django project for potential problems
django-admin changepassword <username> # Allows changing a user’s password. It prompts you to enter a new password twice for the given user.
django-admin clearsessions # Can be run as a cron job or directly to clean out expired sessions.
django-admin collectstatic # Helps to collect all the static files in the one mentioned directory
django-admin createsuperuser # Creates a superuser account (a user who has all permissions).
django-admin compilemessages # Compiles .po files to .mo files for use with builtin gettext support
django-admin createcachetable # Creates the tables needed to use the SQL cache backend.
django-admin dbshell # Runs the command-line client for specified database, or the default database if none is provided.
django-admin diffsettings # Displays differences between the current settings.py and Django's default settings.
django-admin dumpdata # Output the contents of the database as a fixture of the given format (using each model's default manager unless --all is specified).
django-admin flush # Removes ALL DATA from the database, including data added during migrations. Does not achieve a "fresh install" state.
django-admin inspectdb # Introspects the database tables in the given database and outputs a Django model module.
django-admin loaddata # Installs the named fixture(s) in the database.
django-admin makemessages # Runs over the entire source tree of the current directory and pulls out all strings marked for translation. It creates (or updates) a message file in the conf/locale (in the django tree) or locale (for projects and applications) directory. You must run this command with one of either the --locale, --exclude, or --all options.
django-admin help # display usage information and a list of the commands provided by each application
django-admin makemigrations # create new migrations to the database based on the changes detected in the models
django-admin migrate # synchronize the database state with your current state project models and migrations
django-admin remove_stale_contenttypes # Deletes stale content types (from deleted models) in your database.y.
django-admin runserver <port> # start the development webserver at 127.0.0.1 with the port <port> default 8000
django-admin sendtestemail # Sends a test email to the email addresses specified as arguments.
django-admin shell # Runs a Python interactive interpreter. Tries to use IPython or bpython, if one of them is available. Any standard input is executed as code.
django-admin showmigrations # Shows all available migrations for the current project.
django-admin sqlflush # Returns a list of the SQL statements required to return all tables in the database to the state they were in just after they were installed.
django-admin sqlmigrate # Prints the SQL statements for the named migration.
django-admin sqlsequencereset # Prints the SQL statements for resetting sequences for the given app name(s).
django-admin squashmigrations # Squashes an existing set of migrations (from first until specified) into a single new one.
django-admin startapp <Appname> # create a new django application with the specified name
django-admin startproject <ProjectName> # create a new project directory structure
django-admin testserver # Runs a development server with data from the given fixture(s).
django-admin version # display the current django version
# *****************************************************************************
# Starting a django project in python3
# *****************************************************************************
# 1. $ curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py -o get-pip.py; python3 get-pip.py
# 2. $ pip install virtualenv
# 3. $ mkdir django-projects
# 4. $ cd django-projects
# 5. $ virtualenv venv
# 6. $ source venv/bin/activate
# 7. $ pip install django
# 8. $ django-admin startproject myproject
# 9. $ django-admin startapp myapp
# 10. $ python manage.py runserver