Book Image

Django 3 Web Development Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By : Aidas Bendoraitis, Jake Kronika
Book Image

Django 3 Web Development Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By: Aidas Bendoraitis, Jake Kronika

Overview of this book

Django is a web framework for perfectionists with deadlines, designed to help you build manageable medium and large web projects in a short time span. This fourth edition of the Django Web Development Cookbook is updated with Django 3's latest features to guide you effectively through the development process. This Django book starts by helping you create a virtual environment and project structure for building Python web apps. You'll learn how to build models, views, forms, and templates for your web apps and then integrate JavaScript in your Django apps to add more features. As you advance, you'll create responsive multilingual websites, ready to be shared on social networks. The book will take you through uploading and processing images, rendering data in HTML5, PDF, and Excel, using and creating APIs, and navigating different data types in Django. You'll become well-versed in security best practices and caching techniques to enhance your website's security and speed. This edition not only helps you work with the PostgreSQL database but also the MySQL database. You'll also discover advanced recipes for using Django with Docker and Ansible in development, staging, and production environments. By the end of this book, you will have become proficient in using Django's powerful features and will be equipped to create robust websites.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Introduction

Once you have a working website or reusable app, you will want to make it public. Deploying websites is one of the most difficult activities of development with Django, because there are lots of moving parts that you have to tackle:

  • Managing the web server
  • Configuring the database
  • Serving static and media files
  • Processing the Django project
  • Configuring caching
  • Setting up email sending
  • Managing domains
  • Arranging background tasks and cron jobs
  • Setting up continuous integration
  • Other tasks, depending on your project's scale and complexity

In bigger teams, all those tasks are done by DevOps engineers and they require skills like deeply understanding networking and computer architecture, administering Linux servers, bash scripting, using vim, and so on.

Professional websites usually have development, staging, and production environments. Each of them has a specific...