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Try Django 2.2 Web Development with Python 3.6+

  • Development
  • Apr 15, 2025
SynopsisTry Django 2.2 – Web Development with Python 3.6+, avai...
Try Django 2.2 Web Development with Python 3.6+  No.1

Try Django 2.2 – Web Development with Python 3.6+, available at Free, has an average rating of 4.46, with 55 lectures, based on 2454 reviews, and has 62891 subscribers.

You will learn about Build Modern Web Applications with Python 3.6+ Django v2.2 Integrating Bootstrap to Django Web Application Development This course is ideal for individuals who are Beginner Python students looking to build web applications or Anyone interested in Django or Anyone interested in building modern web applications It is particularly useful for Beginner Python students looking to build web applications or Anyone interested in Django or Anyone interested in building modern web applications.

Enroll now: Try Django 2.2 – Web Development with Python 3.6+

Summary

Title: Try Django 2.2 – Web Development with Python 3.6+

Price: Free

Average Rating: 4.46

Number of Lectures: 55

Number of Published Lectures: 55

Number of Curriculum Items: 55

Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 55

Original Price: Free

Quality Status: approved

Status: Live

What You Will Learn

  • Build Modern Web Applications with Python 3.6+
  • Django v2.2
  • Integrating Bootstrap to Django
  • Web Application Development
  • Who Should Attend

  • Beginner Python students looking to build web applications
  • Anyone interested in Django
  • Anyone interested in building modern web applications
  • Target Audiences

  • Beginner Python students looking to build web applications
  • Anyone interested in Django
  • Anyone interested in building modern web applications
  • Try Django 2.2 is the latest in a line of Try Django series. This one covers the latest version of Django by building a blog application.

    Python is one of the best programming languages in the planet. Why??For a few reasons:

  • It’s proven & scalable

  • It’s open-source

  • The Internet?of Things and Raspberry Pi

  • It’s leading the change for future technology

  • Proven &?Scalable: Python runs Instagram’s backend. It also run’s Pinterest’s, NASA, Mozilla, and countless others. It scales.

    Open-Source:?Open source technology means **anyone**?can change it. Literally anyone. Are you in New Zealand??Yup you can change the code. Are you in Argentina??Yup, go ahead change it. Open-source changes the game for everyone because we can all use it.

    Internet of Things (IoT) and Raspberry PI?Connected devices are coming in waves. The easiest way to connect to these devices is using the Raspberry Pi and writing code in Python. Python is versatile?so it makes controlling real-world objects with Raspberry Pi simple.?

    Pushing the Bounds of Future?Technology Python is leading the charge in artificial intelligence with things like OpenCV, TensorFlow,?PyBrain, and many others.

    Sooo Python is cool but why is this called Try Django??What’s Django?

    ***

    Django will be the backbone for your projects.?

    ***

    If you work with Python, the chances are good you need internet-connected data that stored securely and is reliable. This is where Django comes in. Django is a web-framework that can handle all of your data and handle it better than any web framework out there.

    Django is the #1 Web Framework for Python for a reason:?it’s easy enough for the beginners and yet powerful enough for the pros. Instagram uses Python by way of Django. So does Pinterest. And Nasa. And Mozilla. It may not be the only technology that they use but its the backbone of them all.

    If Python is the future behind underlying technology, Django will be it’s close cousin and if you love Python, Django will soon become your friend.

    Cheers!

    Justin

    Course Curriculum

    Chapter 1: Introduction

    Lecture 1: Introduction

    Lecture 2: What were going to build

    Lecture 3: Getting Started & Setup Django + Virtual Environment

    Lecture 4: What Django Does

    Chapter 2: Views & URLs

    Lecture 1: Define a View

    Lecture 2: A First URL Mapping

    Lecture 3: Multiple Views

    Lecture 4: path vs re_path vs url

    Chapter 3: Templates

    Lecture 1: Your First Template

    Lecture 2: Loading an HTML Template

    Lecture 3: Add Bootstrap

    Lecture 4: Render Context in Templates

    Lecture 5: Stay DRY with Templates

    Lecture 6: Rending any Kind of Template

    Lecture 7: Template Context Processors

    Lecture 8: Template Tags

    Chapter 4: Django App Components

    Lecture 1: Your First App

    Lecture 2: Save to the Database

    Lecture 3: Model to Django Admin

    Lecture 4: Model in a View

    Chapter 5: Routing, URLs, & Lookups

    Lecture 1: Dynamic URL-Based Lookups

    Lecture 2: Handling Dynamic URL Errors

    Lecture 3: Get Object or 404

    Lecture 4: A New Database Lookup Value

    Lecture 5: QuerySet Lookups

    Lecture 6: A Unique SLUG

    Chapter 6: Create Update Retrieve Delete

    Lecture 1: CRUD & Views

    Lecture 2: CRUD View Outline

    Lecture 3: Blog Post List View

    Lecture 4: Routing the Views

    Lecture 5: Include URLS

    Lecture 6: In App Templates

    Chapter 7: Forms & User-Generated Data

    Lecture 1: Submit a Raw HTML Form

    Lecture 2: A Django Form

    Lecture 3: Saving Data from a Django Form

    Lecture 4: Model Form

    Lecture 5: Validate Data on Fields

    Chapter 8: Users & Foreign Keys

    Lecture 1: Login Required

    Lecture 2: Associate Blog Post to a User with Foreign Keys

    Lecture 3: Logged In User & Forms

    Lecture 4: Update View with Model Form

    Lecture 5: Better Validation on Update Views

    Lecture 6: Delete and Confirm

    Chapter 9: Navigation & Templates

    Lecture 1: Blog Post Navigation

    Lecture 2: Include the Navbar

    Lecture 3: Include with Arguments

    Lecture 4: An Included Template for Consistent Design

    Chapter 10: Publishing & Display

    Lecture 1: Publish Date, Timestamp & Updated

    Lecture 2: Model Managers and Custom QuerySets

    Lecture 3: Published and Draft Posts

    Lecture 4: Static Files and Uploading Files

    Lecture 5: ImageField and Uploading Images

    Chapter 11: Final Steps

    Lecture 1: Putting it All Together

    Lecture 2: Complex Lookups

    Chapter 12: Thank you

    Lecture 1: Thank you and next steps.

    Instructors

  • Try Django 2.2 Web Development with Python 3.6+  No.2
    Justin Mitchel
    Coding Entrepreneur & Teacher – 568,000+ Students
  • Rating Distribution

  • 1 stars: 45 votes
  • 2 stars: 68 votes
  • 3 stars: 337 votes
  • 4 stars: 824 votes
  • 5 stars: 1180 votes
  • Frequently Asked Questions

    How long do I have access to the course materials?

    You can view and review the lecture materials indefinitely, like an on-demand channel.

    Can I take my courses with me wherever I go?

    Definitely! If you have an internet connection, courses on Udemy are available on any device at any time. If you don’t have an internet connection, some instructors also let their students download course lectures. That’s up to the instructor though, so make sure you get on their good side!