cookiecutter-django
django-ninja
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cookiecutter-django | django-ninja | |
---|---|---|
55 | 70 | |
11,454 | 6,066 | |
1.4% | - | |
9.8 | 9.1 | |
1 day ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cookiecutter-django
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falco VS cookiecutter-django - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 26 Jan 2024
Falco, in contrast to cookiecutter-django, aims to enhance the Django developer experience beyond project generation. It provides a CRUD generator and guides on various Django topics such as task queues, multitendency, deployment, realtime, etc.
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Advanced Python/Django tutorial that ties together multiple technologies
It's not a tutorial but it's a resource to generate a Python+Django project with celery and Dockerfiles and other things you mentioned : https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter-django
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Setting up Django in a Better Way in 5 Minutes and Understanding How It Works
There are very useful packages for bootstrapping your Django projects in minutes such as django-cookiecutter and djangox. If you are a seasoned developer I'd highly recommend using one of these instead of what I'm going to show here. But if you are struggling with the project structure of these packages as a beginner to intermediate Django developer and looking to structure your own Django projects in a better way, I have created a lightweight setup that deals with the basics of setting up a Django project with PostgreSQL as database and TailwindCSS as our styling library.
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A lightweight cookiecutter template for Django - focused specifically on building APIs
And so, the idea for cookiecutter-django-lite came into existence. I am an absolute fan of https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter-django - but for a lot of use cases this template is an overkill so I thought a barebones version of this will be superuseful - and that's how the idea of cookiecutter-django-lite was born.
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Template for Django Projects
Consider taking a look at cookiecutter to generate projects from templates. There is also cookiecutter-django. As for your environment variables you should have an example .env file containing all the environment variables required by your project (without setting them) that can be safely pushed into your repository for you and other developers to copy into the actual .env file that'll be used by your project (add this file to .gitignore)
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Django SaaS Package
I'm obviously biased, so take what I say with a grain of salt, but I also probably know more about this space than ~anyone else. I'd say that your characterization is pretty accurate. There are many similar products to Pegasus (you can find a pretty comprehensive list here: https://github.com/smirnov-am/awesome-saas-boilerplates) but most of them are either more focused on infrastructure/setup (e.g. cookiecutter-django or - as you noted - far less mature/maintained (most of the others on that list).
- Is there an easy approach of deploying Celery?
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What's the most htmx-ish language for the server side?
Boilerplate is not in opposition to productivity. Especially when it’s all written for you, as it is in Django, Rails, etc. You can start with something like Cookiecutter Django.
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Github CI/CD + Django
Strongly recommend „CookieCutter“ for Django. You can build a boilerplate starter project out of it. Add your own Apps and deploy with Docker. I use GitHub Actions SSH to my Hetzner for upload the code and build the docker-images on the server. Very easy and fast.
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Honest opinion: Time required for this job assessment i was given. What do you think?
to speed things up you could get a lot of the building blocks (environments, postgres, drf, redis, containers, etc) in place by starting with cookiecutter and then customize from there.
django-ninja
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Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
Django Ninja [1], it forever changed how I write Django project, in a way so elegant and productive.
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UtilMeta Python Framework VS django-ninja - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 3 Feb 2024
Django Ninja is a RESTful wrapper for Django, while UtilMeta Python Framework uses a more concise declarative ORM Schema for Django and other future-supporting ORMs like sqlachemy and Peewee to build RESTful APIs more efficiently, and supports not only Django but all Python mainstream frameworks like Django, Flask, Starlette, FastAPI, Sanic, Tornado, etc.
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Ask HN: What Python libraries do you wish more people knew about?
I can't recommend [django-ninja](https://github.com/vitalik/django-ninja) enough. It's an easy to use, extremely fast, typed API for django. I've found it to be better in almost all aspects when compared to djangorestframework.
It's gaining popularity but is still widely unknown.
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Building a Blog in Django
> The only place I really see Django at large companies is as an api using DRF or something.
This is not a bad thing. Using Django as an API backend is amazingly fast in terms of development time, especially with modern frameworks such as django-ninja [1].
Just use the built-in ORM to create models, write your endpoints, and use the built-in admin interface to play with the database if you don't have endpoints for everything.
There is also a less known feature of Django called admindocs [2], which automatically generates a human readable, hyperlinked documentation for your models and relations between them.
[1] https://django-ninja.rest-framework.com/
[2] https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/4.2/ref/contrib/admin/admi...
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Learning Django
Personally, I also prefer django-ninja to DRF.
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Why I chose django-ninja instead of django-rest-framework to build my project
Actually that's not fully true. If you mix async and sync codes in django-ninja there will be some errors. Where's the proof ? django-ninja doesn't support async auth
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Built This GPT-Powered Document Search and Question Answering App with Django
Django Ninja
Subscribe to this issue :D
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Django 4.2 released
Also recommend Django-Ninja. It basically reimplements fastapi's type and decorator-based API construction, but embedded directly in django so you have access to django's ORM and middleware library.
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Django 4.2 Released
A good compromise I have found is to use Django Ninja [1]. It is inspired by FastAPI, so it has a lot of the nice things like the automatically generated Swagger/OpenAPI docs, as well as having routers as decorators, and using python types for automatic serialization.
While I think FastAPI is great in its first class async support, Django has the Django ORM, plus Django Admin, which for me have been indisposable.
What are some alternatives?
fastapi - FastAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
django-rest-framework - Web APIs for Django. 🎸
fastapi-admin - A fast admin dashboard based on FastAPI and TortoiseORM with tabler ui, inspired by Django admin
drf-spectacular - Sane and flexible OpenAPI 3 schema generation for Django REST framework.
openapi-generator - OpenAPI Generator allows generation of API client libraries (SDK generation), server stubs, documentation and configuration automatically given an OpenAPI Spec (v2, v3)
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
FrameworkBenchmarks - Source for the TechEmpower Framework Benchmarks project
django-debug-toolbar - A configurable set of panels that display various debug information about the current request/response.
fastapi-fullstack-boilerplate - A full stack (monolith) boilerplate for FastAPI
pegasus-example-apps - Example apps for Saas Pegagus (saaspegasus.com)
django-async-orm - Bringing Async Capabilities to django ORM
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes 🚀