2005-09-28
Django powered Avocados!
Here. Make sure you view the luscious close up version of the picture. *drool*
2005-09-19
The CherryPy Orchard
CherryPy Release Candidate 1 is now available here. Yay!
Earlier today I was watching Kevin Dangoor's very well done screencast on TurboGears and I noticed something that gave me a happy. You see, TurboGears is built on top of CherryPy, and during the presentation I saw one of the minor changes I had made to CherryPy flash on the screen. Even though it's such a tiny thing, I got really chuffed about it.
That's when I realized how wonderful it has been to be a part of a team of talented open source developers like those that help put together CherryPy. I've been using open source for a long time but I've never really enjoyed it as much as I do right now. It's very, very sweet.
Take care.
Earlier today I was watching Kevin Dangoor's very well done screencast on TurboGears and I noticed something that gave me a happy. You see, TurboGears is built on top of CherryPy, and during the presentation I saw one of the minor changes I had made to CherryPy flash on the screen. Even though it's such a tiny thing, I got really chuffed about it.
That's when I realized how wonderful it has been to be a part of a team of talented open source developers like those that help put together CherryPy. I've been using open source for a long time but I've never really enjoyed it as much as I do right now. It's very, very sweet.
Take care.
2005-09-16
Subterranean exploration, part 2 or What's a Widget?
Now that I have the attention of all you Thornton Melon fans, it's time to once again illuminate our electric torches and brandish our pickaxes in search of the latest chunky cured pork products from the Subway project. Today we're going to talk about widgets
Calm down! Calm down. It's okay. There's no danger here. Unlike the terrifying toe eating widgets of the Gobi dessert, Subway's variety are friendly. They're small, cuddly and unicorn-like in their ability to slowly drain impure thoughts from your brains.
Subway's widgets are small bits of view code available in the widget namespace. This means that your views can include those widgets whenever they are needed. The widgets themselves live in your application's widget directory and are, just like Subway's views, Cheetah templates. Here's an example widget that I'm fond of:
That's Subway's notice.html widget which is used for web status notification. Whenever you need it, just drop it into your view using
My friend, if you like widgets, and I mean really like widgets, then go read Subway's How-to page on them right now!
Calm down! Calm down. It's okay. There's no danger here. Unlike the terrifying toe eating widgets of the Gobi dessert, Subway's variety are friendly. They're small, cuddly and unicorn-like in their ability to slowly drain impure thoughts from your brains.
Subway's widgets are small bits of view code available in the widget namespace. This means that your views can include those widgets whenever they are needed. The widgets themselves live in your application's widget directory and are, just like Subway's views, Cheetah templates. Here's an example widget that I'm fond of:
#if 'notice' in $flash
<div class="notice">
$escape($flash.notice)
</div>
#end if
That's Subway's notice.html widget which is used for web status notification. Whenever you need it, just drop it into your view using
$widget.noticeand you're all set. If you need to you can also pass arguments to your widgets using normal Python syntax.
My friend, if you like widgets, and I mean really like widgets, then go read Subway's How-to page on them right now!
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