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More doc improvements: tweaks to the overview; added admin css documentation from wilson.
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docs/admin_css.txt
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docs/admin_css.txt
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======================
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Django Admin CSS Guide
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======================
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Django's dynamic admin interface gives you a fully-functional admin for free
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with no hand-coding required. The dynamic admin is designed to be
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production-ready, not just a starting point, so you can use it as-is on a real
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site. While the underlying format of the admin pages is built in to Django, you
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can customize the look and feel by editing the admin stylesheet and images.
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Here's a quick and dirty overview some of the main styles and classes used in
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the Django admin CSS.
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Modules
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=======
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The ``.module`` class is a basic building block for grouping content in the
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admin. It's generally applied to ``div``s or ``fieldset``s. It wraps the content
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group in a box and applies certain styles to the elements within. An ``h2``
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within a ``div.module`` will align to the top of the ``div`` as a header for the
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whole group.
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Column Types
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============
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The base template for each admin page has a block that defines the column
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structure for the page. This sets a class on the page content area
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(``div#content``) so everything on the page knows how wide it should be. So far
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there are three options available, and one special hybrid option.
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colM
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This is the default column setting for all pages. The "M" stands for "main".
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Assumes that all content on the page is in one main column
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(``div#content-main``).
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colMS
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This is for pages with one main column and a sidebar on the right. The "S"
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stands for "sidebar". Assumes that main content is in ``div#content-main``
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and sidebar content is in ``div#content-related``. This is used on the main
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admin page.
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colSM
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Same as above, with the sidebar on the left. The source order of the columns
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doesn't matter.
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colM superwide
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This is for ridiculously wide pages. Doesn't really work very well for
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anything but colM. With superwide, you've got 1000px to work with. Don't
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waste them.
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flex
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This is for liquid-width pages, such as changelists. Currently only works
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with single-colum pages (does not combine with ``.colMS`` or ``.colSM``).
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Form pages should never use ``.flex``.
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For instance, you could stick this in a template to make a superwide page::
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{% block coltype %}colM superwide{% endblock %}
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or this to make a liquid-width page (note that ``flex`` replaces ``colM``, so
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both classes are not required)::
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{% block coltype %}flex{% endblock %}
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Widths
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======
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There's a whole mess of classes in the stylesheet for custom pixel widths on
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objects. They come in handy for tables and table cells, if you want to avoid
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using the ``width`` attribute. Each class sets the width to the number of pixels
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in the class, except ``.xfull`` which will always be the width of the column
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it's in. (This helps with tables that you want to always fill the horizontal
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width, without using ``width="100%"`` which makes IE 5's box model cry.)
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``'Note:``' Within a ``.flex`` page, the ``.xfull`` class will ``usually`` set
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to 100%, but there are exceptions and still some untested cases.
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Available width classes::
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.x50 .x75 .x100 .x150 .x200 .x250 .x300 .x400 .x500 .xfull
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Text Styles
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===========
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Font Sizes
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----------
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Most HTML elements (headers, lists, etc.) have base font sizes in the stylesheet
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based on context. There are three classes are available for forcing text to a
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certain size in any context.
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small
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11px
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tiny
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10px
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mini
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9px (use sparingly)
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Font Styles and Alignment
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-------------------------
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There are also a few styles for styling text.
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.quiet
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Sets font color to light gray. Good for side notes in instructions. Combine
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with ``.small`` or ``.tiny`` for sheer excitement.
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.help
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This is a custom class for blocks of inline help text explaining the
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function of form elements. It makes text smaller and gray, and when applied
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to ``p``s withing ``.form-row`` elements (see Form Styles below), it will
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offset the text to align with the form field. Use this for help text,
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instead of ``small quiet``. It works on ``span``s, but try to put the class
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on the ``p`` whenever you can.
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.align-left
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It aligns the text left. Only works on block elements, I think.
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.align-right
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Are you paying attention?
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.nowrap
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Keeps text from wrapping. Comes in handy for table headers you want to stay
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on one line.
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Floats and Clears
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-----------------
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float-left
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floats left
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float-right
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floats right
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clear
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clears all
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Object Tools
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============
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Certain actions which apply directly to an object are used in form and
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changelist pages. These appear in a "toolbar" row above the form or changelist,
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to the right of the page. The tools are wrapped in a ``ul`` with the class
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``object-tools``. There are two custom tool types which can be defined with an
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additional class on the ``a`` for that tool. These are ``.addlink`` and
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``.viewsitelink``.
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Example from a changelist page::
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<ul class="object-tools"><li><a href="/stories/add/" class="addlink">Add story</a></li></ul>
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and from a form page::
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<ul class="object-tools">
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<li><a href="/history/303/152383/">History</a></li>
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<li><a href="/r/303/152383/" class="viewsitelink">View on site</a></li>
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</ul>
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Form Styles
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===========
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Fieldsets
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---------
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Admin forms are broken up into groups by ``fieldset``s. Each form fieldset
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should have a class ``.module``. Each fieldset should have a header ``h2``
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within the fieldset at the top (except the first group in the form, and in some
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cases where the group of fields doesn't have a logical label).
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Each fieldset can also take extra classes in addition to ``.module`` to apply
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appropriate formatting to the group of fields.
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.aligned
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this will align the labels and inputs side by side on the same line.
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.wide
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used in combination with ``.aligned`` to widen the space available for the labels.
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Form Rows
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---------
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Each row of the form (within the ``fieldset``) should be enclosed in a ``div``
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with class ``form-row``. If the field in the row is required, a class of
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``required`` should also be added to the ``form-row div``.
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Labels
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------
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Each form ``label`` and field should be enclosed in a header ``h4``. Any
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explanation or help text should follow this ``h4`` in a ``p`` with class
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``.help``. Form ``label``s should always precede the field, except in the case
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of checkboxes and radio buttons, where the ``input`` should come first.
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===============
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Django overview
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===============
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==================
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Django at a glance
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==================
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Because Django was developed in a fast-paced newsroom environment, it was
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designed to make common Web-development tasks fast and easy. Here's an informal
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@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ Design your model
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=================
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Start by describing your database layout in Python code. Django's data-model API
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offers many rich ways of representing your models — so far, it's been
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offers many rich ways of representing your models -- so far, it's been
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solving two years' worth of database-schema problems. Here's a quick example::
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class Reporter(meta.Model):
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@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ A dynamic admin interface: It's not just scaffolding -- it's the whole house
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============================================================================
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Once your models are defined, Django can automatically create an administrative
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interface — a Web site that lets authenticated users add, change and
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interface -- a Web site that lets authenticated users add, change and
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delete objects. It's as easy as adding an extra admin attribute to your model
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classes::
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@ -183,9 +183,9 @@ requested URL. (If none of them matches, Django calls a special 404 view.) This
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is blazingly fast, because the regular expressions are compiled at load time.
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Once one of the regexes matches, Django imports and calls the given view, which
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is a simple Python function. Each view gets passed a request object —
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is a simple Python function. Each view gets passed a request object --
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which contains request metadata and lets you access GET and POST data as simple
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dictionaries — and the values captured in the regex, via keyword
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dictionaries -- and the values captured in the regex, via keyword
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arguments.
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For example, if a user requested the URL "/articles/2005/05/39323/", Django
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@ -282,14 +282,14 @@ Here's what the "base" template might look like::
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Simplistically, it defines the look-and-feel of the site (with the site's logo),
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and provides "holes" for child templates to fill. This makes a site redesign as
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easy as changing a single file — the base template.
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easy as changing a single file -- the base template.
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Note that you don't have to use Django's template system if you prefer another
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system. While Django's template system is particularly well-integrated with
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Django's model layer, nothing forces you to use it. For that matter, you don't
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have to use Django's API, either. You can use another database abstraction
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layer, you can read XML files, you can read files off disk, or anything you
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want. Each piece of Django — models, views, templates — is decoupled
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want. Each piece of Django -- models, views, templates -- is decoupled
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from the next.
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This is just the surface
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@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ features:
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* A caching framework that integrates with memcached or other backends.
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* An RSS framework that makes creating RSS feeds as easy as writing a
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small Python class.
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* More sexy automatically-generated admin features — this overview barely
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* More sexy automatically-generated admin features -- this overview barely
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scratched the surface
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The next obvious steps are for you to download Django, read the documentation
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