Blog | Jacob Kaplan-Moss |
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RSS 2.0 Feed | django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss |
web | https://jacobian.org/tags/django/ |
Last Update | 12.22.2024 |
Posts | 53 |
Recent content in django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss
Blog | Jacob Kaplan-Moss |
---|---|
RSS 2.0 Feed | django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss |
web | https://jacobian.org/tags/django/ |
Last Update | 12.22.2024 |
Posts | 53 |
Oct. 18, 2024 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Applications are open for the 2025 Django Software Foundation Board of Directors – you can apply until October 25th. So, in this post I’ll do two things: try to convince you to run for the board, and document my goals and priorities for 2025.
Read MoreOct. 8, 2024 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
What would the Django Software Foundation look like if we had 4x our current budget?
Read MoreMarch 20, 2024 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
I was on the Django Chat podcast to about Django’s history, the creation of the DSF, my recent return to the DSF board and my goals there, and the things I’m excited about for Django going forward. Here are some highlights from the interview.
Read MoreJune 22, 2023 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
I wanted to make a model field where the underlying data is a string, but the field on model instances exposes more attributes. Specifically, a MarkdownField: class Document(models.Model): text = MarkdownField() that exposes a way to get at its content as both HTML and source Markdown: >>> doc = Document(text="hello, *world*") >>> doc.text "hello, *world*" >>> doc.text.html "hello, <strong>world</strong>" This is not too uncommon in Django-land – for…
Read MoreDec. 20, 2021 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Tomorrow is Volunteer Responsibility Amnesty Day, a day to reflect on your responsibilities as a volunteer and, if any of them are too burdensome, set them down. I’m observing it this year; here’s how and why.
Read MoreSept. 11, 2020 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Denial-of-Service (DoS) vulnerabilities are common, but teams frequently disagree on how to treat them. The risk can be difficult to analyze: I’ve seen development teams argue for weeks over how to handle a DoS vector. This article tries to cut through those arguments. It provides a framework for engineering and application security teams to think about denial-of-service risk, breaks down DoS vulnerabilities into high-, medium-, and low-risk classes, and has recommendations for mitigations at e…
Read MoreMay 15, 2020 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
SQL Injection (SQLi) is one of the most dangerous classes of web vulnerabilities. Thankfully, it’s becoming increasingly rare — thanks mostly to increasing use of database abstraction layers like Django’s ORM — but where it occurs it can be devastating. This article will help you understand and prevent SQLi vulnerabilities in your Django apps.
Read MoreMarch 13, 2020 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Starting today, Django has a new governance model. Previously, a small “core team” made most decisions, including electing a Technical Board to own decisions about each release. Now, the “core team” is gone; all power rests with the Technical Board. Anyone who’s made substantial contributions to Django is now eligible to run, and the board is now elected by the DSF Membership at large. You can read more about the change in today’s announcement, and if you wan…
Read MoreNov. 22, 2016 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Videos from Django Under the Hood 2016 are up - check ’em out! As usual, the conference was amazing and the content was fantastic. I really enjoyed all the talks, and they’re all worth your time to talk. Three in particular stood out to me as exceptional highlights: Ana’s talk on Testing in Django is the single best talk on effective testing of Django apps I’ve ever seen. I really like her technique of explaining Django’s testing APIs by looking at how they changed…
Read MoreMay 26, 2016 » django on Jacob Kaplan-Moss » [Archived Version]
Django’s admin site is about 12 years old. It started circa early 2004 as an internal CMS at the Lawrence Journal-World, was released as part of Django in 2005, and has been chugging away ever since. There’s been some substantial re-writes along the way – magic-removal, new forms, the flat theme – but for the most part the admin’s stayed pretty much the same for that entire time. The interface, functionality, and CRUD-oriented workflow haven’t really changed …
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