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Ce qui se rapproche le plus de l'admin de django en .Net Core ?
Sounds interesting ;)
Bon j'imagine que c'est du déjà lu, mais ça vaut le coup de le garder sous la main...
Même si on n'en est pas si loin...
Genre. C'est beau. C'est propre.
It boils down to this. An upgrade costs money, sometimes a lot of money, but the result has no visible outcome. In fact, in many cases the only outcome is an assurance that you've reduced the probability of attack, intrusion, breach and related unpleasantness. By any measure, that's a tough...
Juste utile. Parce qu'il me manquait freetds dans les dépendances, et que le serveur ne se plaignait que quand on passait dans la requête, forcément.
Encore un truc à lire (à l'occasion...).
Il existe un livre sur leanpub.
Un module de tableau de bord pour Django.
Dieu que c'est beau.
Detailed descriptions, with full methods and attributes, for each of Django REST Framework's class-based views and serializers.
Intégration d'un projet Django dans PyCharm...
A garder sous le coude pour la gestion documentaire :-p
A essayer (et la licence PRO a l'air alléchante aussi :) )
GraphQL was introduced by Facebook in February 2015, and at first what I didn't quite get is how adding this layer of abstraction into my web application would be any helpful and useful. We’ve been offered to rewrite everything in a new way when we’ve just got used to using REST API. But when I became more familiar with it, I clearly understood that GraphQL is the future of web development, and let me explain why.