Re-editable FormPreview
When checking a form preview, a user happens to change content of the form and "Re edit" again.
- form
- preview
When checking a form preview, a user happens to change content of the form and "Re edit" again.
snippet to create asynchronous send mail in django
Middleware to set "sessionid" (ou your session cookie) with httponly (see ["Django bug report"](http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/3304)). To work, you need put it before "SessionMiddleware"
Forces Django not to translate built in template tags and filters. If you have a multi-lingual site but certain parts of it are not all translated, you can use this snippet to force Django to bypass translation on all template tags and filters so things like dates aren't randomly translated whilst everything else is not. For example: `{% notrans %}{{download.doc|filesizeformat}}{% endnotrans %}` This snippet including the filesizeformat template tag would not be translated. Mega thanks goes out to Dan Fairs for all his help on this!
This allows you to just call excel_date and it will convert any dates between excel and python datetime.
This is just a `AdminDateWidget` with missing JSs added. Don't forget to call `{{ from.media }}` in template.
Katakana in UTF-8 check
Overrides the `_send` method of the default SMTP `EmailBackend` class to include a [DKIM](http://www.dkim.org/) signature based on settings: 1. `DKIM_SELECTOR` -- e.g. `'selector'` if using `selector._domainkey.example.com` 2. `DKIM_DOMAIN` -- e.g. `'example.com'` 3. `DKIM_PRIVATE_KEY` -- full private key string, including `"""-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----"""`, etc You'll need [pydkim](http://hewgill.com/pydkim/). Just include this code in `project_name.email_backend.py`, for example, and select it in your settings file; e.g. `EMAIL_BACKEND = 'project_name.email_backend.DKIMBackend'`
This is the same as [{% widthratio %}](http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#widthratio) but when the given value is greater than the max_value it just uses the max_value. This way the result is never greater than max_value. It also returns max_width if the max_value is 0 instead of returning a blank string. Usage example: {% smart_widthratio this_value max_value 100 %}
This is useful when you need to convert a datetime.datetime.now() or datetime.date.today() into a unix epoch seconds, with microsecond precision (precision only applies to datetime.datetime, as datetime.date won't have any microseconds). I have found this is necessary for when storing the DateTime in the models as a FloatField, in order to keep the usec/microsecond precision. At some point, I will probably create a custom model field called DateTimeWithUSec or something like that, but for now, this will do :)
I often need to dump data from a database to csv. This little snippet should make it easy enough to do without having to worry too much about character encodings, though it does assume you want your csv file to be utf-8 encoded. Note that this dumps just one table from the database. Trying to dump all the tables in your app will raise an exception.
Usage: `clean_html = strip_tags(html, {'a': ['href'], 'p': ['class']})` Based on [another snippet](http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/205/).
It's fixed the right and bottom for each use. A vertical line is a line with the same right and left, so it fixed the right attribute to be the same value of the left attribute. A horizontal line is a line with the same bottom and top, so it fixed the bottom to be the same value of the top attribute.
This snippet for django-1.2 allows you to use bitwise operators without using QuerySet.extra() from django.db.models import * from somewhere import FQ class BitWise(Model): type = CharField(max_length=8) value = IntegerField() def __unicode__(self): return '%s - %d' % (self.type, self.value) >>> BitWise.objects.create(type='django', value=1) <BitWise: django - 1> >>> BitWise.objects.create(type='osso', value=3) <BitWise: osso - 3> >>> BitWise.objects.create(type='osso', value=7) <BitWise: osso - 7> >>> BitWise.objects.filter(FQ(F('value') & 1, 'gt', 0)) [<BitWise: django - 1>, <BitWise: osso - 3>, <BitWise: osso - 7>] >>> BitWise.objects.filter(FQ(F('value') & 2, 'gt', 0)) [<BitWise: osso - 3>, <BitWise: osso - 7>] >>> BitWise.objects.filter(FQ(F('value') & 1, 'gt', 0) & Q(type='django')) [<BitWise: django - 1>]
I've taken it from hostgator help page. I hope it will be useful for you.