A Django site.
March 5, 2008

Kevin Kubasik
nonic
For Once I Oneder
» Can Someone Get Us A Real Django IDE?


So the more I work with Django the more I long for a solid development environment to work in. I use Wingware for much of my python development, with its rockin debugger and code completion, its more than I could ask for. Until the curse of the Java class. This quarter I’m taking a Java projects course, most of the class uses Eclipse but a few use Netbeans. My problem is, I got spoiled so fast by the incredible templates support, content suggestions, quick fixes and always dead on code completion. Going back to Wing feels like a halfway-there IDE. I know that pythons interpreted nature makes source completion much more difficult, now I would argue that with an interpreter, you could actually step through the code to some extent. However, I respect that dynamic objects are never gonna be easy to support. My beef is with the lack of support for super-popular frameworks (this goes for everybody!) Ruby on Rails has literally dozens of solid IDEs and a few that are just spectacular (see Aptana, or Netbeans). Why can’t I get even basic highlighting support for my Django templates? Why can’t I get any completion options on Models except my own?

Its just frustrating, Django is still a pleasure to develop in, even with just Gedit and a terminal, but is it really out of the question to consider providing a big pretty environment for those of us that like that?

I did dig up this and this. I guess its a step in the right direction, but its almost embarrassing next to the Rails environments.

November 21, 2007

Jared Ottley
nonic
Jared Ottley
» Jeos and Initramfs

When installing Ubuntu Jeos in VMWare, you need to change the disk type in VMWare from SCSI to IDE, otherwise, when it goes to boot, it will appear to hang and then launch in to initramfs, because it is not expecting SCSI disks, even though you may have installed on SCSI disks. This was very frustrating for a couple of hours.