django-async-orm
cookiecutter-django
django-async-orm | cookiecutter-django | |
---|---|---|
6 | 55 | |
130 | 11,562 | |
- | 0.9% | |
6.1 | 9.8 | |
10 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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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.
django-async-orm
- Django 4.0 Released
- Django module that brings async to django ORM.
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Show HN: Django Async ORM
I'm not sure if its official. Would love some more guidance/clarity/docs/funding from the django foundation on what it looks like to migrate legacy code to the new ways.
The rednaks repo works great for just giving the new async stuff a go. If everything else is also using async.
I did some experimentation with this. And its a pain trying to migrate a production application that uses gevent and psycogreen2.
The documentation on the code migration path is pretty sparse.
The main hiccup that I ran into was psycogreen2 not being supported.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67735453/django-async-or...
https://github.com/rednaks/django-async-orm/discussions/9
- Django 4.0 release candidate 1 released
- Bringing Async Capabilities to Django ORM
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).
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Need help deploying my first project.
I followed a lot of the guidance found in this "template" here: https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter-django
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Where from to start building project?
If you understand all that and just want to get started as quickly as possible, use a project generator such as cookiecutter-django or API Bakery. Note that I'd avoid using these until you have a solid grasp of Django otherwise you'll have no idea what's going on.
- 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 itβs all written for you, as it is in Django, Rails, etc. You can start with something like Cookiecutter Django.
What are some alternatives?
tortoise-orm - Familiar asyncio ORM for python, built with relations in mind
django-ninja - π¨ Fast, Async-ready, Openapi, type hints based framework for building APIs
fastapi - FastAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
pegasus-example-apps - Example apps for Saas Pegagus (saaspegasus.com)
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes π
aiosql - Simple SQL in Python
django-tailwind - Django + Tailwind CSS = π
celery - Distributed Task Queue (development branch)
cookiecutter-django-ecs-github - Complete Walkthrough: Blue/Green Deployment to AWS ECS using Cookiecutter-Django using GitHub actions
docker-django-example - A production ready example Django app that's using Docker and Docker Compose.
boilerplate-code-django-dashboard - Boilerplate Code - Django Dashboard | AppSeed