Dive in deep to the core concepts behind the power Django framework written in Python. Using Django 1.10 with Python 3
Intermediate Level, – 16.5 hours, 136 lectures
Average rating 4.4/5 (4.4 (97 ratings) Instead of using a simple lifetime average, Udemy calculates a course’s star rating by considering a number of different factors such as the number of ratings, the age of ratings, and the likelihood of fraudulent ratings.)
Course requirements:
Try Django 1.8 & Up (suggested course is Try Django 1.9 as it has Try Django 1.8 too)
Python knowledge is a plus (30 Days of Python is a suggested course)
Course description:
Our philosophy is teaching individuals how to code by going through step by step projects. This drives the majority of our content with one exception: the Django Core course.
In this course, we go in-depth into various Django concepts to provide a comprehensive guide to topics that include:
Django Models
Model Instance Methods & Properties
Model-level field validation
How models map to databases and Primary Keys
Django Forms and Formsets
Form validation
Model Form
Function Based Views (FBVs)
Class Based Views (CBVs)
CRUD in Django Views (Create Retrieve Update Delete List)
Django Templates
Template Inheritance
Template shortcuts & Filters
Django translation
and much more!
We built this for students looking for a in-depth look at the above concepts. We encourage you to have some experience with Django such as our Try Django series (1.8 & Up) which is available on Udemy.
Full details
Django Models
Model Instance Methods & Properties
Model-level field validation
Django Forms and Formsets
Form validation
Model Form
Function Based Views (FBVs)
Class Based Views (CBVs)
CRUD in Django Views (Create Retrieve Update Delete List)
Django Templates
Django translation
Deploying Django on a Live Server| Heroku, Webfaction, Linode, Digital Ocean
Celery + Redis for asynchronous tasks and scheduled tasks
and much more!
Requirements are Python 2.7 or 3.3 and Django 1.8 & up
We use Python 3 and Django 1.10 in this one
Full details
Requirements are Python 2.7 or 3.3 and Django 1.8 & up
We use Python 3 and Django 1.10 in this one
Anyone looking to learn more about Django
Any student looking to build robust cutting edge web applications
Python Users
Django beginners with some experience, like doing our Try Django (1.8 & up Series)
Full details
Reviews:
“Very well explain step by step and very useful for someone as beginner, if you are new this is the best for practic. My only comment is you are a bit fast.” (Dilshad Abdulla)
“The course is good but:
1) It is advertised as using “Python 3 and Django 1.10” which is not the case for all modules.
This makes some lessons/modules/code lines to be incompatible with Python 3 and Django 1.10.
The instructor use video rehashes from other course and in some cases refused(at this moment) to update them to be compatible.
Off course you can make the updates yourself (are not very hard) but I still think it is not ok.
2) Some more medium-advanced topics are missing important lessons and details: like Foreign Keys, CBV with ModelForm, InlineFormsets, LoginRequiredMixin class, permissions and PermissionMixin, recover/update/confirm passwords. etc
The author recommends third-part packages to use, but still he should have talk about them.
3) Many times he answers (not only to my question) with: “googling”, “search yourself”, “check documentation”, “ask on stack overflow” or vague.
From my experience with other instructors (non-Django courses) his answer quality is 4 of 10.
Regarding 2) and 3) my conclusion is that the instructor doesn’t know medium-advanced topics very well or he doesn’t want to allocate time to answer properly to questions.” (Paul)“Awesome work! it’s my personal cheat sheet :)” (İsmai̇l Sari)
About Instructor:
Justin Mitchel
It all started with an idea. I wanted freedom… badly. Freedom from work, freedom from boredom, and, most of all, the freedom to choose. This simple idea grew to define me; it made me become an entrepreneur.
As I strived to gain freedom, overtime I realized that with everything that you do you can either (1) convince someone, somehow, to do it with you or (2) figure out how to do it yourself.
Due to a lack of financial resources (and probably the ability to convince people to do high quality work for free), I decided to learn. Then learn some more. Then some more. My path of learning website design started a long time ago. And yes, it was out of need not desire. I believed I needed a website for a company that I started. So I learned how to do it. The company died, my skills lived on… and got better and better.
It took me a while after learning web design (html/css) to actually start learning programming (web application, storing “data”, user logins, etc). I tinkered with WordPress, believing it could be a “user” site, but I was mistaken. Sure there are/were hacks for that, but they were hacks/work-arounds and simply not-what-wordpress-was-indended-to-be. WordPress is for blogs/content. Plain and simple.
I wanted more. I had a web application idea that I thought would change the way restaurants hire their service staff. I tested it with my basic html/css skills, had great initial results, and found a technical (programmer) cofounder as a result. He was awesome. We were featured on CNN. Things looked great.
Until… cash-flow was a no-flow. Business? I think not. More like an avid hobby. We had the idea for a business just no business. Naturally, my partner had to find a means of income so I was left with the idea on its own.
Remember how I said everything we do has 2 choices. Well I tried the convincing. Now it was time to try the learning. I opted to learn and haven’t looked back since. I tried almost every language out there: PHP, Ruby on Rails, SQL, Objective C, C++, Java, Javascript. I was lost.
Then, I tried Python. I was hooked. It was so easy. So simple. So elegant.
Then, I tried Django. Even more hooked. Made from python & made for web applications. It powers Instagram & Pinterest (two of the hottest web apps right now?).
Then, I tried Bootstrap. Simple and easy front-end design (html & css) that is super easy to use, mobile-ready, and overall… incredible.
Python, Django, and Bootstrap are truly changing the way the world builds web applications. I believe it’s because of the simplicity to learn, the sheer power behind them, and, most of all, the plethora of resources to aid anyone in building their web projects (from packages to tutorials to q&a sites).
I relaunched my original venture with my new found skills. That wasn’t enough. It didn’t compel me as it once had. I started imagining all the possibilities of all the ideas I’ve always wanted to implement. Now I could. Which one to start with? There were so many good ideas…
Then another idea, a new & fresh idea, started brewing. I started to believe in the power of learning these skills. What would it mean if other non-technical entrepreneurs could learn? What would it mean if ideas were executed quickly, revenue models proven, all prior to approaching the highly sought-after programmers? What would it mean if entrepreneurs became coders?
And so. Coding for Entrepreneurs was born.
Here are some bio highlights:
Instructor Other Courses:
Tweetme | Build a Twitter-like app step by step with Django Justin Mitchel, Coding Entrepreneur & Teacher (64) $10 $195
Homebaked | Raspberry Pi + Django Home Server
Try Django 1.10 | Create a URL Shortening Service
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