annotate photologue/README.txt @ 111:23efa49f5e29

Bootstrap: flyers page.
author Brian Neal <bgneal@gmail.com>
date Sat, 19 Oct 2013 17:18:25 -0500
parents e2868ad47a1e
children
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bgneal@1 1 Installation
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bgneal@1 3 Step 1 - Download Photologue
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bgneal@1 5 Photologue can be downloaded below or from the project page. Older versions are also available from the project page and users who like to live on the edge can checkout a copy of the latest trunk revision.
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bgneal@1 7 Step 2 - Add Photologue To Your Project
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bgneal@1 9 Copy the entire Photologue application folder (the folder named 'photologue' that contains 'models.py') to a location on your Python path such as your project root. Your project root is typically the directory where your 'settings.py' is found.
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bgneal@1 11 Step 3 - Configure Your Settings
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bgneal@1 13 Add 'photologue' to your INSTALLED_APPS setting:
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bgneal@1 15 INSTALLED_APPS = (
bgneal@1 16 # ...other installed applications,
bgneal@1 17 'photologue',
bgneal@1 18 )
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bgneal@1 20 Confirm that your MEDIA_ROOT and MEDIA_URL settings are correct.
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bgneal@1 22 If you want to tweak things even more you can also over-ride a few default settings (optional, see documentation for more information on the available settings).
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bgneal@1 24 Step 4 - Register Photologue with the Django Admin
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bgneal@1 26 Add the following to your projects urls.py file:
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bgneal@1 28 from django.contrib import admin
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bgneal@1 30 admin.autodiscover()
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bgneal@1 32 Step 4 - Sync Your Database
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bgneal@1 34 Run the 'manage.py syndb' command to create the appropriate tables. After the database in initialized, Photologue will walk you through creating some default models.
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bgneal@1 36 Additional documentation available here:
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bgneal@1 38 http://code.google.com/p/django-photologue/w/list