docker setup

This commit is contained in:
AdrienLSH
2023-11-23 16:43:30 +01:00
parent fd19180e1d
commit f29003c66a
5410 changed files with 869440 additions and 0 deletions

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from django.utils.version import get_version
VERSION = (4, 2, 6, "final", 0)
__version__ = get_version(VERSION)
def setup(set_prefix=True):
"""
Configure the settings (this happens as a side effect of accessing the
first setting), configure logging and populate the app registry.
Set the thread-local urlresolvers script prefix if `set_prefix` is True.
"""
from django.apps import apps
from django.conf import settings
from django.urls import set_script_prefix
from django.utils.log import configure_logging
configure_logging(settings.LOGGING_CONFIG, settings.LOGGING)
if set_prefix:
set_script_prefix(
"/" if settings.FORCE_SCRIPT_NAME is None else settings.FORCE_SCRIPT_NAME
)
apps.populate(settings.INSTALLED_APPS)

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"""
Invokes django-admin when the django module is run as a script.
Example: python -m django check
"""
from django.core import management
if __name__ == "__main__":
management.execute_from_command_line()

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from .config import AppConfig
from .registry import apps
__all__ = ["AppConfig", "apps"]

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import inspect
import os
from importlib import import_module
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.utils.functional import cached_property
from django.utils.module_loading import import_string, module_has_submodule
APPS_MODULE_NAME = "apps"
MODELS_MODULE_NAME = "models"
class AppConfig:
"""Class representing a Django application and its configuration."""
def __init__(self, app_name, app_module):
# Full Python path to the application e.g. 'django.contrib.admin'.
self.name = app_name
# Root module for the application e.g. <module 'django.contrib.admin'
# from 'django/contrib/admin/__init__.py'>.
self.module = app_module
# Reference to the Apps registry that holds this AppConfig. Set by the
# registry when it registers the AppConfig instance.
self.apps = None
# The following attributes could be defined at the class level in a
# subclass, hence the test-and-set pattern.
# Last component of the Python path to the application e.g. 'admin'.
# This value must be unique across a Django project.
if not hasattr(self, "label"):
self.label = app_name.rpartition(".")[2]
if not self.label.isidentifier():
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"The app label '%s' is not a valid Python identifier." % self.label
)
# Human-readable name for the application e.g. "Admin".
if not hasattr(self, "verbose_name"):
self.verbose_name = self.label.title()
# Filesystem path to the application directory e.g.
# '/path/to/django/contrib/admin'.
if not hasattr(self, "path"):
self.path = self._path_from_module(app_module)
# Module containing models e.g. <module 'django.contrib.admin.models'
# from 'django/contrib/admin/models.py'>. Set by import_models().
# None if the application doesn't have a models module.
self.models_module = None
# Mapping of lowercase model names to model classes. Initially set to
# None to prevent accidental access before import_models() runs.
self.models = None
def __repr__(self):
return "<%s: %s>" % (self.__class__.__name__, self.label)
@cached_property
def default_auto_field(self):
from django.conf import settings
return settings.DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD
@property
def _is_default_auto_field_overridden(self):
return self.__class__.default_auto_field is not AppConfig.default_auto_field
def _path_from_module(self, module):
"""Attempt to determine app's filesystem path from its module."""
# See #21874 for extended discussion of the behavior of this method in
# various cases.
# Convert to list because __path__ may not support indexing.
paths = list(getattr(module, "__path__", []))
if len(paths) != 1:
filename = getattr(module, "__file__", None)
if filename is not None:
paths = [os.path.dirname(filename)]
else:
# For unknown reasons, sometimes the list returned by __path__
# contains duplicates that must be removed (#25246).
paths = list(set(paths))
if len(paths) > 1:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"The app module %r has multiple filesystem locations (%r); "
"you must configure this app with an AppConfig subclass "
"with a 'path' class attribute." % (module, paths)
)
elif not paths:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"The app module %r has no filesystem location, "
"you must configure this app with an AppConfig subclass "
"with a 'path' class attribute." % module
)
return paths[0]
@classmethod
def create(cls, entry):
"""
Factory that creates an app config from an entry in INSTALLED_APPS.
"""
# create() eventually returns app_config_class(app_name, app_module).
app_config_class = None
app_name = None
app_module = None
# If import_module succeeds, entry points to the app module.
try:
app_module = import_module(entry)
except Exception:
pass
else:
# If app_module has an apps submodule that defines a single
# AppConfig subclass, use it automatically.
# To prevent this, an AppConfig subclass can declare a class
# variable default = False.
# If the apps module defines more than one AppConfig subclass,
# the default one can declare default = True.
if module_has_submodule(app_module, APPS_MODULE_NAME):
mod_path = "%s.%s" % (entry, APPS_MODULE_NAME)
mod = import_module(mod_path)
# Check if there's exactly one AppConfig candidate,
# excluding those that explicitly define default = False.
app_configs = [
(name, candidate)
for name, candidate in inspect.getmembers(mod, inspect.isclass)
if (
issubclass(candidate, cls)
and candidate is not cls
and getattr(candidate, "default", True)
)
]
if len(app_configs) == 1:
app_config_class = app_configs[0][1]
else:
# Check if there's exactly one AppConfig subclass,
# among those that explicitly define default = True.
app_configs = [
(name, candidate)
for name, candidate in app_configs
if getattr(candidate, "default", False)
]
if len(app_configs) > 1:
candidates = [repr(name) for name, _ in app_configs]
raise RuntimeError(
"%r declares more than one default AppConfig: "
"%s." % (mod_path, ", ".join(candidates))
)
elif len(app_configs) == 1:
app_config_class = app_configs[0][1]
# Use the default app config class if we didn't find anything.
if app_config_class is None:
app_config_class = cls
app_name = entry
# If import_string succeeds, entry is an app config class.
if app_config_class is None:
try:
app_config_class = import_string(entry)
except Exception:
pass
# If both import_module and import_string failed, it means that entry
# doesn't have a valid value.
if app_module is None and app_config_class is None:
# If the last component of entry starts with an uppercase letter,
# then it was likely intended to be an app config class; if not,
# an app module. Provide a nice error message in both cases.
mod_path, _, cls_name = entry.rpartition(".")
if mod_path and cls_name[0].isupper():
# We could simply re-trigger the string import exception, but
# we're going the extra mile and providing a better error
# message for typos in INSTALLED_APPS.
# This may raise ImportError, which is the best exception
# possible if the module at mod_path cannot be imported.
mod = import_module(mod_path)
candidates = [
repr(name)
for name, candidate in inspect.getmembers(mod, inspect.isclass)
if issubclass(candidate, cls) and candidate is not cls
]
msg = "Module '%s' does not contain a '%s' class." % (
mod_path,
cls_name,
)
if candidates:
msg += " Choices are: %s." % ", ".join(candidates)
raise ImportError(msg)
else:
# Re-trigger the module import exception.
import_module(entry)
# Check for obvious errors. (This check prevents duck typing, but
# it could be removed if it became a problem in practice.)
if not issubclass(app_config_class, AppConfig):
raise ImproperlyConfigured("'%s' isn't a subclass of AppConfig." % entry)
# Obtain app name here rather than in AppClass.__init__ to keep
# all error checking for entries in INSTALLED_APPS in one place.
if app_name is None:
try:
app_name = app_config_class.name
except AttributeError:
raise ImproperlyConfigured("'%s' must supply a name attribute." % entry)
# Ensure app_name points to a valid module.
try:
app_module = import_module(app_name)
except ImportError:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"Cannot import '%s'. Check that '%s.%s.name' is correct."
% (
app_name,
app_config_class.__module__,
app_config_class.__qualname__,
)
)
# Entry is a path to an app config class.
return app_config_class(app_name, app_module)
def get_model(self, model_name, require_ready=True):
"""
Return the model with the given case-insensitive model_name.
Raise LookupError if no model exists with this name.
"""
if require_ready:
self.apps.check_models_ready()
else:
self.apps.check_apps_ready()
try:
return self.models[model_name.lower()]
except KeyError:
raise LookupError(
"App '%s' doesn't have a '%s' model." % (self.label, model_name)
)
def get_models(self, include_auto_created=False, include_swapped=False):
"""
Return an iterable of models.
By default, the following models aren't included:
- auto-created models for many-to-many relations without
an explicit intermediate table,
- models that have been swapped out.
Set the corresponding keyword argument to True to include such models.
Keyword arguments aren't documented; they're a private API.
"""
self.apps.check_models_ready()
for model in self.models.values():
if model._meta.auto_created and not include_auto_created:
continue
if model._meta.swapped and not include_swapped:
continue
yield model
def import_models(self):
# Dictionary of models for this app, primarily maintained in the
# 'all_models' attribute of the Apps this AppConfig is attached to.
self.models = self.apps.all_models[self.label]
if module_has_submodule(self.module, MODELS_MODULE_NAME):
models_module_name = "%s.%s" % (self.name, MODELS_MODULE_NAME)
self.models_module = import_module(models_module_name)
def ready(self):
"""
Override this method in subclasses to run code when Django starts.
"""

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import functools
import sys
import threading
import warnings
from collections import Counter, defaultdict
from functools import partial
from django.core.exceptions import AppRegistryNotReady, ImproperlyConfigured
from .config import AppConfig
class Apps:
"""
A registry that stores the configuration of installed applications.
It also keeps track of models, e.g. to provide reverse relations.
"""
def __init__(self, installed_apps=()):
# installed_apps is set to None when creating the main registry
# because it cannot be populated at that point. Other registries must
# provide a list of installed apps and are populated immediately.
if installed_apps is None and hasattr(sys.modules[__name__], "apps"):
raise RuntimeError("You must supply an installed_apps argument.")
# Mapping of app labels => model names => model classes. Every time a
# model is imported, ModelBase.__new__ calls apps.register_model which
# creates an entry in all_models. All imported models are registered,
# regardless of whether they're defined in an installed application
# and whether the registry has been populated. Since it isn't possible
# to reimport a module safely (it could reexecute initialization code)
# all_models is never overridden or reset.
self.all_models = defaultdict(dict)
# Mapping of labels to AppConfig instances for installed apps.
self.app_configs = {}
# Stack of app_configs. Used to store the current state in
# set_available_apps and set_installed_apps.
self.stored_app_configs = []
# Whether the registry is populated.
self.apps_ready = self.models_ready = self.ready = False
# For the autoreloader.
self.ready_event = threading.Event()
# Lock for thread-safe population.
self._lock = threading.RLock()
self.loading = False
# Maps ("app_label", "modelname") tuples to lists of functions to be
# called when the corresponding model is ready. Used by this class's
# `lazy_model_operation()` and `do_pending_operations()` methods.
self._pending_operations = defaultdict(list)
# Populate apps and models, unless it's the main registry.
if installed_apps is not None:
self.populate(installed_apps)
def populate(self, installed_apps=None):
"""
Load application configurations and models.
Import each application module and then each model module.
It is thread-safe and idempotent, but not reentrant.
"""
if self.ready:
return
# populate() might be called by two threads in parallel on servers
# that create threads before initializing the WSGI callable.
with self._lock:
if self.ready:
return
# An RLock prevents other threads from entering this section. The
# compare and set operation below is atomic.
if self.loading:
# Prevent reentrant calls to avoid running AppConfig.ready()
# methods twice.
raise RuntimeError("populate() isn't reentrant")
self.loading = True
# Phase 1: initialize app configs and import app modules.
for entry in installed_apps:
if isinstance(entry, AppConfig):
app_config = entry
else:
app_config = AppConfig.create(entry)
if app_config.label in self.app_configs:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"Application labels aren't unique, "
"duplicates: %s" % app_config.label
)
self.app_configs[app_config.label] = app_config
app_config.apps = self
# Check for duplicate app names.
counts = Counter(
app_config.name for app_config in self.app_configs.values()
)
duplicates = [name for name, count in counts.most_common() if count > 1]
if duplicates:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"Application names aren't unique, "
"duplicates: %s" % ", ".join(duplicates)
)
self.apps_ready = True
# Phase 2: import models modules.
for app_config in self.app_configs.values():
app_config.import_models()
self.clear_cache()
self.models_ready = True
# Phase 3: run ready() methods of app configs.
for app_config in self.get_app_configs():
app_config.ready()
self.ready = True
self.ready_event.set()
def check_apps_ready(self):
"""Raise an exception if all apps haven't been imported yet."""
if not self.apps_ready:
from django.conf import settings
# If "not ready" is due to unconfigured settings, accessing
# INSTALLED_APPS raises a more helpful ImproperlyConfigured
# exception.
settings.INSTALLED_APPS
raise AppRegistryNotReady("Apps aren't loaded yet.")
def check_models_ready(self):
"""Raise an exception if all models haven't been imported yet."""
if not self.models_ready:
raise AppRegistryNotReady("Models aren't loaded yet.")
def get_app_configs(self):
"""Import applications and return an iterable of app configs."""
self.check_apps_ready()
return self.app_configs.values()
def get_app_config(self, app_label):
"""
Import applications and returns an app config for the given label.
Raise LookupError if no application exists with this label.
"""
self.check_apps_ready()
try:
return self.app_configs[app_label]
except KeyError:
message = "No installed app with label '%s'." % app_label
for app_config in self.get_app_configs():
if app_config.name == app_label:
message += " Did you mean '%s'?" % app_config.label
break
raise LookupError(message)
# This method is performance-critical at least for Django's test suite.
@functools.lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_models(self, include_auto_created=False, include_swapped=False):
"""
Return a list of all installed models.
By default, the following models aren't included:
- auto-created models for many-to-many relations without
an explicit intermediate table,
- models that have been swapped out.
Set the corresponding keyword argument to True to include such models.
"""
self.check_models_ready()
result = []
for app_config in self.app_configs.values():
result.extend(app_config.get_models(include_auto_created, include_swapped))
return result
def get_model(self, app_label, model_name=None, require_ready=True):
"""
Return the model matching the given app_label and model_name.
As a shortcut, app_label may be in the form <app_label>.<model_name>.
model_name is case-insensitive.
Raise LookupError if no application exists with this label, or no
model exists with this name in the application. Raise ValueError if
called with a single argument that doesn't contain exactly one dot.
"""
if require_ready:
self.check_models_ready()
else:
self.check_apps_ready()
if model_name is None:
app_label, model_name = app_label.split(".")
app_config = self.get_app_config(app_label)
if not require_ready and app_config.models is None:
app_config.import_models()
return app_config.get_model(model_name, require_ready=require_ready)
def register_model(self, app_label, model):
# Since this method is called when models are imported, it cannot
# perform imports because of the risk of import loops. It mustn't
# call get_app_config().
model_name = model._meta.model_name
app_models = self.all_models[app_label]
if model_name in app_models:
if (
model.__name__ == app_models[model_name].__name__
and model.__module__ == app_models[model_name].__module__
):
warnings.warn(
"Model '%s.%s' was already registered. Reloading models is not "
"advised as it can lead to inconsistencies, most notably with "
"related models." % (app_label, model_name),
RuntimeWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
else:
raise RuntimeError(
"Conflicting '%s' models in application '%s': %s and %s."
% (model_name, app_label, app_models[model_name], model)
)
app_models[model_name] = model
self.do_pending_operations(model)
self.clear_cache()
def is_installed(self, app_name):
"""
Check whether an application with this name exists in the registry.
app_name is the full name of the app e.g. 'django.contrib.admin'.
"""
self.check_apps_ready()
return any(ac.name == app_name for ac in self.app_configs.values())
def get_containing_app_config(self, object_name):
"""
Look for an app config containing a given object.
object_name is the dotted Python path to the object.
Return the app config for the inner application in case of nesting.
Return None if the object isn't in any registered app config.
"""
self.check_apps_ready()
candidates = []
for app_config in self.app_configs.values():
if object_name.startswith(app_config.name):
subpath = object_name[len(app_config.name) :]
if subpath == "" or subpath[0] == ".":
candidates.append(app_config)
if candidates:
return sorted(candidates, key=lambda ac: -len(ac.name))[0]
def get_registered_model(self, app_label, model_name):
"""
Similar to get_model(), but doesn't require that an app exists with
the given app_label.
It's safe to call this method at import time, even while the registry
is being populated.
"""
model = self.all_models[app_label].get(model_name.lower())
if model is None:
raise LookupError("Model '%s.%s' not registered." % (app_label, model_name))
return model
@functools.lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_swappable_settings_name(self, to_string):
"""
For a given model string (e.g. "auth.User"), return the name of the
corresponding settings name if it refers to a swappable model. If the
referred model is not swappable, return None.
This method is decorated with lru_cache because it's performance
critical when it comes to migrations. Since the swappable settings don't
change after Django has loaded the settings, there is no reason to get
the respective settings attribute over and over again.
"""
to_string = to_string.lower()
for model in self.get_models(include_swapped=True):
swapped = model._meta.swapped
# Is this model swapped out for the model given by to_string?
if swapped and swapped.lower() == to_string:
return model._meta.swappable
# Is this model swappable and the one given by to_string?
if model._meta.swappable and model._meta.label_lower == to_string:
return model._meta.swappable
return None
def set_available_apps(self, available):
"""
Restrict the set of installed apps used by get_app_config[s].
available must be an iterable of application names.
set_available_apps() must be balanced with unset_available_apps().
Primarily used for performance optimization in TransactionTestCase.
This method is safe in the sense that it doesn't trigger any imports.
"""
available = set(available)
installed = {app_config.name for app_config in self.get_app_configs()}
if not available.issubset(installed):
raise ValueError(
"Available apps isn't a subset of installed apps, extra apps: %s"
% ", ".join(available - installed)
)
self.stored_app_configs.append(self.app_configs)
self.app_configs = {
label: app_config
for label, app_config in self.app_configs.items()
if app_config.name in available
}
self.clear_cache()
def unset_available_apps(self):
"""Cancel a previous call to set_available_apps()."""
self.app_configs = self.stored_app_configs.pop()
self.clear_cache()
def set_installed_apps(self, installed):
"""
Enable a different set of installed apps for get_app_config[s].
installed must be an iterable in the same format as INSTALLED_APPS.
set_installed_apps() must be balanced with unset_installed_apps(),
even if it exits with an exception.
Primarily used as a receiver of the setting_changed signal in tests.
This method may trigger new imports, which may add new models to the
registry of all imported models. They will stay in the registry even
after unset_installed_apps(). Since it isn't possible to replay
imports safely (e.g. that could lead to registering listeners twice),
models are registered when they're imported and never removed.
"""
if not self.ready:
raise AppRegistryNotReady("App registry isn't ready yet.")
self.stored_app_configs.append(self.app_configs)
self.app_configs = {}
self.apps_ready = self.models_ready = self.loading = self.ready = False
self.clear_cache()
self.populate(installed)
def unset_installed_apps(self):
"""Cancel a previous call to set_installed_apps()."""
self.app_configs = self.stored_app_configs.pop()
self.apps_ready = self.models_ready = self.ready = True
self.clear_cache()
def clear_cache(self):
"""
Clear all internal caches, for methods that alter the app registry.
This is mostly used in tests.
"""
# Call expire cache on each model. This will purge
# the relation tree and the fields cache.
self.get_models.cache_clear()
if self.ready:
# Circumvent self.get_models() to prevent that the cache is refilled.
# This particularly prevents that an empty value is cached while cloning.
for app_config in self.app_configs.values():
for model in app_config.get_models(include_auto_created=True):
model._meta._expire_cache()
def lazy_model_operation(self, function, *model_keys):
"""
Take a function and a number of ("app_label", "modelname") tuples, and
when all the corresponding models have been imported and registered,
call the function with the model classes as its arguments.
The function passed to this method must accept exactly n models as
arguments, where n=len(model_keys).
"""
# Base case: no arguments, just execute the function.
if not model_keys:
function()
# Recursive case: take the head of model_keys, wait for the
# corresponding model class to be imported and registered, then apply
# that argument to the supplied function. Pass the resulting partial
# to lazy_model_operation() along with the remaining model args and
# repeat until all models are loaded and all arguments are applied.
else:
next_model, *more_models = model_keys
# This will be executed after the class corresponding to next_model
# has been imported and registered. The `func` attribute provides
# duck-type compatibility with partials.
def apply_next_model(model):
next_function = partial(apply_next_model.func, model)
self.lazy_model_operation(next_function, *more_models)
apply_next_model.func = function
# If the model has already been imported and registered, partially
# apply it to the function now. If not, add it to the list of
# pending operations for the model, where it will be executed with
# the model class as its sole argument once the model is ready.
try:
model_class = self.get_registered_model(*next_model)
except LookupError:
self._pending_operations[next_model].append(apply_next_model)
else:
apply_next_model(model_class)
def do_pending_operations(self, model):
"""
Take a newly-prepared model and pass it to each function waiting for
it. This is called at the very end of Apps.register_model().
"""
key = model._meta.app_label, model._meta.model_name
for function in self._pending_operations.pop(key, []):
function(model)
apps = Apps(installed_apps=None)

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"""
Settings and configuration for Django.
Read values from the module specified by the DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment
variable, and then from django.conf.global_settings; see the global_settings.py
for a list of all possible variables.
"""
import importlib
import os
import time
import traceback
import warnings
from pathlib import Path
import django
from django.conf import global_settings
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.utils.deprecation import RemovedInDjango50Warning, RemovedInDjango51Warning
from django.utils.functional import LazyObject, empty
ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE = "DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"
DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS = "default"
STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS = "staticfiles"
# RemovedInDjango50Warning
USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ_DEPRECATED_MSG = (
"The USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ setting, and support for pytz timezones is "
"deprecated in favor of the stdlib zoneinfo module. Please update your "
"code to use zoneinfo and remove the USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ setting."
)
USE_L10N_DEPRECATED_MSG = (
"The USE_L10N setting is deprecated. Starting with Django 5.0, localized "
"formatting of data will always be enabled. For example Django will "
"display numbers and dates using the format of the current locale."
)
CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED_DEPRECATED_MSG = (
"The CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED transitional setting is deprecated. Support for "
"it will be removed in Django 5.0."
)
DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG = (
"The DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE setting is deprecated. Use STORAGES instead."
)
STATICFILES_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG = (
"The STATICFILES_STORAGE setting is deprecated. Use STORAGES instead."
)
class SettingsReference(str):
"""
String subclass which references a current settings value. It's treated as
the value in memory but serializes to a settings.NAME attribute reference.
"""
def __new__(self, value, setting_name):
return str.__new__(self, value)
def __init__(self, value, setting_name):
self.setting_name = setting_name
class LazySettings(LazyObject):
"""
A lazy proxy for either global Django settings or a custom settings object.
The user can manually configure settings prior to using them. Otherwise,
Django uses the settings module pointed to by DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE.
"""
def _setup(self, name=None):
"""
Load the settings module pointed to by the environment variable. This
is used the first time settings are needed, if the user hasn't
configured settings manually.
"""
settings_module = os.environ.get(ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE)
if not settings_module:
desc = ("setting %s" % name) if name else "settings"
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"Requested %s, but settings are not configured. "
"You must either define the environment variable %s "
"or call settings.configure() before accessing settings."
% (desc, ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE)
)
self._wrapped = Settings(settings_module)
def __repr__(self):
# Hardcode the class name as otherwise it yields 'Settings'.
if self._wrapped is empty:
return "<LazySettings [Unevaluated]>"
return '<LazySettings "%(settings_module)s">' % {
"settings_module": self._wrapped.SETTINGS_MODULE,
}
def __getattr__(self, name):
"""Return the value of a setting and cache it in self.__dict__."""
if (_wrapped := self._wrapped) is empty:
self._setup(name)
_wrapped = self._wrapped
val = getattr(_wrapped, name)
# Special case some settings which require further modification.
# This is done here for performance reasons so the modified value is cached.
if name in {"MEDIA_URL", "STATIC_URL"} and val is not None:
val = self._add_script_prefix(val)
elif name == "SECRET_KEY" and not val:
raise ImproperlyConfigured("The SECRET_KEY setting must not be empty.")
self.__dict__[name] = val
return val
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
"""
Set the value of setting. Clear all cached values if _wrapped changes
(@override_settings does this) or clear single values when set.
"""
if name == "_wrapped":
self.__dict__.clear()
else:
self.__dict__.pop(name, None)
super().__setattr__(name, value)
def __delattr__(self, name):
"""Delete a setting and clear it from cache if needed."""
super().__delattr__(name)
self.__dict__.pop(name, None)
def configure(self, default_settings=global_settings, **options):
"""
Called to manually configure the settings. The 'default_settings'
parameter sets where to retrieve any unspecified values from (its
argument must support attribute access (__getattr__)).
"""
if self._wrapped is not empty:
raise RuntimeError("Settings already configured.")
holder = UserSettingsHolder(default_settings)
for name, value in options.items():
if not name.isupper():
raise TypeError("Setting %r must be uppercase." % name)
setattr(holder, name, value)
self._wrapped = holder
@staticmethod
def _add_script_prefix(value):
"""
Add SCRIPT_NAME prefix to relative paths.
Useful when the app is being served at a subpath and manually prefixing
subpath to STATIC_URL and MEDIA_URL in settings is inconvenient.
"""
# Don't apply prefix to absolute paths and URLs.
if value.startswith(("http://", "https://", "/")):
return value
from django.urls import get_script_prefix
return "%s%s" % (get_script_prefix(), value)
@property
def configured(self):
"""Return True if the settings have already been configured."""
return self._wrapped is not empty
def _show_deprecation_warning(self, message, category):
stack = traceback.extract_stack()
# Show a warning if the setting is used outside of Django.
# Stack index: -1 this line, -2 the property, -3 the
# LazyObject __getattribute__(), -4 the caller.
filename, _, _, _ = stack[-4]
if not filename.startswith(os.path.dirname(django.__file__)):
warnings.warn(message, category, stacklevel=2)
@property
def USE_L10N(self):
self._show_deprecation_warning(
USE_L10N_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning
)
return self.__getattr__("USE_L10N")
# RemovedInDjango50Warning.
@property
def _USE_L10N_INTERNAL(self):
# Special hook to avoid checking a traceback in internal use on hot
# paths.
return self.__getattr__("USE_L10N")
# RemovedInDjango51Warning.
@property
def DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE(self):
self._show_deprecation_warning(
DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning
)
return self.__getattr__("DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE")
# RemovedInDjango51Warning.
@property
def STATICFILES_STORAGE(self):
self._show_deprecation_warning(
STATICFILES_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning
)
return self.__getattr__("STATICFILES_STORAGE")
class Settings:
def __init__(self, settings_module):
# update this dict from global settings (but only for ALL_CAPS settings)
for setting in dir(global_settings):
if setting.isupper():
setattr(self, setting, getattr(global_settings, setting))
# store the settings module in case someone later cares
self.SETTINGS_MODULE = settings_module
mod = importlib.import_module(self.SETTINGS_MODULE)
tuple_settings = (
"ALLOWED_HOSTS",
"INSTALLED_APPS",
"TEMPLATE_DIRS",
"LOCALE_PATHS",
"SECRET_KEY_FALLBACKS",
)
self._explicit_settings = set()
for setting in dir(mod):
if setting.isupper():
setting_value = getattr(mod, setting)
if setting in tuple_settings and not isinstance(
setting_value, (list, tuple)
):
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"The %s setting must be a list or a tuple." % setting
)
setattr(self, setting, setting_value)
self._explicit_settings.add(setting)
if self.USE_TZ is False and not self.is_overridden("USE_TZ"):
warnings.warn(
"The default value of USE_TZ will change from False to True "
"in Django 5.0. Set USE_TZ to False in your project settings "
"if you want to keep the current default behavior.",
category=RemovedInDjango50Warning,
)
if self.is_overridden("USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ"):
warnings.warn(USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
if self.is_overridden("CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED"):
warnings.warn(CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
if hasattr(time, "tzset") and self.TIME_ZONE:
# When we can, attempt to validate the timezone. If we can't find
# this file, no check happens and it's harmless.
zoneinfo_root = Path("/usr/share/zoneinfo")
zone_info_file = zoneinfo_root.joinpath(*self.TIME_ZONE.split("/"))
if zoneinfo_root.exists() and not zone_info_file.exists():
raise ValueError("Incorrect timezone setting: %s" % self.TIME_ZONE)
# Move the time zone info into os.environ. See ticket #2315 for why
# we don't do this unconditionally (breaks Windows).
os.environ["TZ"] = self.TIME_ZONE
time.tzset()
if self.is_overridden("USE_L10N"):
warnings.warn(USE_L10N_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
if self.is_overridden("DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE"):
if self.is_overridden("STORAGES"):
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE/STORAGES are mutually exclusive."
)
self.STORAGES = {
**self.STORAGES,
DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS: {"BACKEND": self.DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE},
}
warnings.warn(DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning)
if self.is_overridden("STATICFILES_STORAGE"):
if self.is_overridden("STORAGES"):
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"STATICFILES_STORAGE/STORAGES are mutually exclusive."
)
self.STORAGES = {
**self.STORAGES,
STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS: {"BACKEND": self.STATICFILES_STORAGE},
}
warnings.warn(STATICFILES_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning)
# RemovedInDjango51Warning.
if self.is_overridden("STORAGES"):
setattr(
self,
"DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE",
self.STORAGES.get(DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS, {}).get("BACKEND"),
)
setattr(
self,
"STATICFILES_STORAGE",
self.STORAGES.get(STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS, {}).get("BACKEND"),
)
def is_overridden(self, setting):
return setting in self._explicit_settings
def __repr__(self):
return '<%(cls)s "%(settings_module)s">' % {
"cls": self.__class__.__name__,
"settings_module": self.SETTINGS_MODULE,
}
class UserSettingsHolder:
"""Holder for user configured settings."""
# SETTINGS_MODULE doesn't make much sense in the manually configured
# (standalone) case.
SETTINGS_MODULE = None
def __init__(self, default_settings):
"""
Requests for configuration variables not in this class are satisfied
from the module specified in default_settings (if possible).
"""
self.__dict__["_deleted"] = set()
self.default_settings = default_settings
def __getattr__(self, name):
if not name.isupper() or name in self._deleted:
raise AttributeError
return getattr(self.default_settings, name)
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
self._deleted.discard(name)
if name == "USE_L10N":
warnings.warn(USE_L10N_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
if name == "CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED":
warnings.warn(CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
if name == "DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE":
self.STORAGES[DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS] = {
"BACKEND": self.DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE
}
warnings.warn(DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning)
if name == "STATICFILES_STORAGE":
self.STORAGES[STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS] = {
"BACKEND": self.STATICFILES_STORAGE
}
warnings.warn(STATICFILES_STORAGE_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango51Warning)
super().__setattr__(name, value)
if name == "USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ":
warnings.warn(USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ_DEPRECATED_MSG, RemovedInDjango50Warning)
# RemovedInDjango51Warning.
if name == "STORAGES":
if default_file_storage := self.STORAGES.get(DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS):
super().__setattr__(
"DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE", default_file_storage.get("BACKEND")
)
else:
self.STORAGES.setdefault(
DEFAULT_STORAGE_ALIAS,
{"BACKEND": "django.core.files.storage.FileSystemStorage"},
)
if staticfiles_storage := self.STORAGES.get(STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS):
super().__setattr__(
"STATICFILES_STORAGE", staticfiles_storage.get("BACKEND")
)
else:
self.STORAGES.setdefault(
STATICFILES_STORAGE_ALIAS,
{
"BACKEND": (
"django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage"
),
},
)
def __delattr__(self, name):
self._deleted.add(name)
if hasattr(self, name):
super().__delattr__(name)
def __dir__(self):
return sorted(
s
for s in [*self.__dict__, *dir(self.default_settings)]
if s not in self._deleted
)
def is_overridden(self, setting):
deleted = setting in self._deleted
set_locally = setting in self.__dict__
set_on_default = getattr(
self.default_settings, "is_overridden", lambda s: False
)(setting)
return deleted or set_locally or set_on_default
def __repr__(self):
return "<%(cls)s>" % {
"cls": self.__class__.__name__,
}
settings = LazySettings()

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from django.contrib import admin
# Register your models here.

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from django.apps import AppConfig
class {{ camel_case_app_name }}Config(AppConfig):
default_auto_field = 'django.db.models.BigAutoField'
name = '{{ app_name }}'

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from django.db import models
# Create your models here.

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from django.test import TestCase
# Create your tests here.

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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
from django.shortcuts import render
# Create your views here.

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"""
Default Django settings. Override these with settings in the module pointed to
by the DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment variable.
"""
# This is defined here as a do-nothing function because we can't import
# django.utils.translation -- that module depends on the settings.
def gettext_noop(s):
return s
####################
# CORE #
####################
DEBUG = False
# Whether the framework should propagate raw exceptions rather than catching
# them. This is useful under some testing situations and should never be used
# on a live site.
DEBUG_PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS = False
# People who get code error notifications. In the format
# [('Full Name', 'email@example.com'), ('Full Name', 'anotheremail@example.com')]
ADMINS = []
# List of IP addresses, as strings, that:
# * See debug comments, when DEBUG is true
# * Receive x-headers
INTERNAL_IPS = []
# Hosts/domain names that are valid for this site.
# "*" matches anything, ".example.com" matches example.com and all subdomains
ALLOWED_HOSTS = []
# Local time zone for this installation. All choices can be found here:
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_zones_by_name (although not all
# systems may support all possibilities). When USE_TZ is True, this is
# interpreted as the default user time zone.
TIME_ZONE = "America/Chicago"
# If you set this to True, Django will use timezone-aware datetimes.
USE_TZ = False
# RemovedInDjango50Warning: It's a transitional setting helpful in migrating
# from pytz tzinfo to ZoneInfo(). Set True to continue using pytz tzinfo
# objects during the Django 4.x release cycle.
USE_DEPRECATED_PYTZ = False
# Language code for this installation. All choices can be found here:
# http://www.i18nguy.com/unicode/language-identifiers.html
LANGUAGE_CODE = "en-us"
# Languages we provide translations for, out of the box.
LANGUAGES = [
("af", gettext_noop("Afrikaans")),
("ar", gettext_noop("Arabic")),
("ar-dz", gettext_noop("Algerian Arabic")),
("ast", gettext_noop("Asturian")),
("az", gettext_noop("Azerbaijani")),
("bg", gettext_noop("Bulgarian")),
("be", gettext_noop("Belarusian")),
("bn", gettext_noop("Bengali")),
("br", gettext_noop("Breton")),
("bs", gettext_noop("Bosnian")),
("ca", gettext_noop("Catalan")),
("ckb", gettext_noop("Central Kurdish (Sorani)")),
("cs", gettext_noop("Czech")),
("cy", gettext_noop("Welsh")),
("da", gettext_noop("Danish")),
("de", gettext_noop("German")),
("dsb", gettext_noop("Lower Sorbian")),
("el", gettext_noop("Greek")),
("en", gettext_noop("English")),
("en-au", gettext_noop("Australian English")),
("en-gb", gettext_noop("British English")),
("eo", gettext_noop("Esperanto")),
("es", gettext_noop("Spanish")),
("es-ar", gettext_noop("Argentinian Spanish")),
("es-co", gettext_noop("Colombian Spanish")),
("es-mx", gettext_noop("Mexican Spanish")),
("es-ni", gettext_noop("Nicaraguan Spanish")),
("es-ve", gettext_noop("Venezuelan Spanish")),
("et", gettext_noop("Estonian")),
("eu", gettext_noop("Basque")),
("fa", gettext_noop("Persian")),
("fi", gettext_noop("Finnish")),
("fr", gettext_noop("French")),
("fy", gettext_noop("Frisian")),
("ga", gettext_noop("Irish")),
("gd", gettext_noop("Scottish Gaelic")),
("gl", gettext_noop("Galician")),
("he", gettext_noop("Hebrew")),
("hi", gettext_noop("Hindi")),
("hr", gettext_noop("Croatian")),
("hsb", gettext_noop("Upper Sorbian")),
("hu", gettext_noop("Hungarian")),
("hy", gettext_noop("Armenian")),
("ia", gettext_noop("Interlingua")),
("id", gettext_noop("Indonesian")),
("ig", gettext_noop("Igbo")),
("io", gettext_noop("Ido")),
("is", gettext_noop("Icelandic")),
("it", gettext_noop("Italian")),
("ja", gettext_noop("Japanese")),
("ka", gettext_noop("Georgian")),
("kab", gettext_noop("Kabyle")),
("kk", gettext_noop("Kazakh")),
("km", gettext_noop("Khmer")),
("kn", gettext_noop("Kannada")),
("ko", gettext_noop("Korean")),
("ky", gettext_noop("Kyrgyz")),
("lb", gettext_noop("Luxembourgish")),
("lt", gettext_noop("Lithuanian")),
("lv", gettext_noop("Latvian")),
("mk", gettext_noop("Macedonian")),
("ml", gettext_noop("Malayalam")),
("mn", gettext_noop("Mongolian")),
("mr", gettext_noop("Marathi")),
("ms", gettext_noop("Malay")),
("my", gettext_noop("Burmese")),
("nb", gettext_noop("Norwegian Bokmål")),
("ne", gettext_noop("Nepali")),
("nl", gettext_noop("Dutch")),
("nn", gettext_noop("Norwegian Nynorsk")),
("os", gettext_noop("Ossetic")),
("pa", gettext_noop("Punjabi")),
("pl", gettext_noop("Polish")),
("pt", gettext_noop("Portuguese")),
("pt-br", gettext_noop("Brazilian Portuguese")),
("ro", gettext_noop("Romanian")),
("ru", gettext_noop("Russian")),
("sk", gettext_noop("Slovak")),
("sl", gettext_noop("Slovenian")),
("sq", gettext_noop("Albanian")),
("sr", gettext_noop("Serbian")),
("sr-latn", gettext_noop("Serbian Latin")),
("sv", gettext_noop("Swedish")),
("sw", gettext_noop("Swahili")),
("ta", gettext_noop("Tamil")),
("te", gettext_noop("Telugu")),
("tg", gettext_noop("Tajik")),
("th", gettext_noop("Thai")),
("tk", gettext_noop("Turkmen")),
("tr", gettext_noop("Turkish")),
("tt", gettext_noop("Tatar")),
("udm", gettext_noop("Udmurt")),
("uk", gettext_noop("Ukrainian")),
("ur", gettext_noop("Urdu")),
("uz", gettext_noop("Uzbek")),
("vi", gettext_noop("Vietnamese")),
("zh-hans", gettext_noop("Simplified Chinese")),
("zh-hant", gettext_noop("Traditional Chinese")),
]
# Languages using BiDi (right-to-left) layout
LANGUAGES_BIDI = ["he", "ar", "ar-dz", "ckb", "fa", "ur"]
# If you set this to False, Django will make some optimizations so as not
# to load the internationalization machinery.
USE_I18N = True
LOCALE_PATHS = []
# Settings for language cookie
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_NAME = "django_language"
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_AGE = None
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_DOMAIN = None
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_PATH = "/"
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_SECURE = False
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_HTTPONLY = False
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_SAMESITE = None
# If you set this to True, Django will format dates, numbers and calendars
# according to user current locale.
USE_L10N = True
# Not-necessarily-technical managers of the site. They get broken link
# notifications and other various emails.
MANAGERS = ADMINS
# Default charset to use for all HttpResponse objects, if a MIME type isn't
# manually specified. It's used to construct the Content-Type header.
DEFAULT_CHARSET = "utf-8"
# Email address that error messages come from.
SERVER_EMAIL = "root@localhost"
# Database connection info. If left empty, will default to the dummy backend.
DATABASES = {}
# Classes used to implement DB routing behavior.
DATABASE_ROUTERS = []
# The email backend to use. For possible shortcuts see django.core.mail.
# The default is to use the SMTP backend.
# Third-party backends can be specified by providing a Python path
# to a module that defines an EmailBackend class.
EMAIL_BACKEND = "django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend"
# Host for sending email.
EMAIL_HOST = "localhost"
# Port for sending email.
EMAIL_PORT = 25
# Whether to send SMTP 'Date' header in the local time zone or in UTC.
EMAIL_USE_LOCALTIME = False
# Optional SMTP authentication information for EMAIL_HOST.
EMAIL_HOST_USER = ""
EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = ""
EMAIL_USE_TLS = False
EMAIL_USE_SSL = False
EMAIL_SSL_CERTFILE = None
EMAIL_SSL_KEYFILE = None
EMAIL_TIMEOUT = None
# List of strings representing installed apps.
INSTALLED_APPS = []
TEMPLATES = []
# Default form rendering class.
FORM_RENDERER = "django.forms.renderers.DjangoTemplates"
# Default email address to use for various automated correspondence from
# the site managers.
DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL = "webmaster@localhost"
# Subject-line prefix for email messages send with django.core.mail.mail_admins
# or ...mail_managers. Make sure to include the trailing space.
EMAIL_SUBJECT_PREFIX = "[Django] "
# Whether to append trailing slashes to URLs.
APPEND_SLASH = True
# Whether to prepend the "www." subdomain to URLs that don't have it.
PREPEND_WWW = False
# Override the server-derived value of SCRIPT_NAME
FORCE_SCRIPT_NAME = None
# List of compiled regular expression objects representing User-Agent strings
# that are not allowed to visit any page, systemwide. Use this for bad
# robots/crawlers. Here are a few examples:
# import re
# DISALLOWED_USER_AGENTS = [
# re.compile(r'^NaverBot.*'),
# re.compile(r'^EmailSiphon.*'),
# re.compile(r'^SiteSucker.*'),
# re.compile(r'^sohu-search'),
# ]
DISALLOWED_USER_AGENTS = []
ABSOLUTE_URL_OVERRIDES = {}
# List of compiled regular expression objects representing URLs that need not
# be reported by BrokenLinkEmailsMiddleware. Here are a few examples:
# import re
# IGNORABLE_404_URLS = [
# re.compile(r'^/apple-touch-icon.*\.png$'),
# re.compile(r'^/favicon.ico$'),
# re.compile(r'^/robots.txt$'),
# re.compile(r'^/phpmyadmin/'),
# re.compile(r'\.(cgi|php|pl)$'),
# ]
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = []
# A secret key for this particular Django installation. Used in secret-key
# hashing algorithms. Set this in your settings, or Django will complain
# loudly.
SECRET_KEY = ""
# List of secret keys used to verify the validity of signatures. This allows
# secret key rotation.
SECRET_KEY_FALLBACKS = []
# Default file storage mechanism that holds media.
DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE = "django.core.files.storage.FileSystemStorage"
STORAGES = {
"default": {
"BACKEND": "django.core.files.storage.FileSystemStorage",
},
"staticfiles": {
"BACKEND": "django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage",
},
}
# Absolute filesystem path to the directory that will hold user-uploaded files.
# Example: "/var/www/example.com/media/"
MEDIA_ROOT = ""
# URL that handles the media served from MEDIA_ROOT.
# Examples: "http://example.com/media/", "http://media.example.com/"
MEDIA_URL = ""
# Absolute path to the directory static files should be collected to.
# Example: "/var/www/example.com/static/"
STATIC_ROOT = None
# URL that handles the static files served from STATIC_ROOT.
# Example: "http://example.com/static/", "http://static.example.com/"
STATIC_URL = None
# List of upload handler classes to be applied in order.
FILE_UPLOAD_HANDLERS = [
"django.core.files.uploadhandler.MemoryFileUploadHandler",
"django.core.files.uploadhandler.TemporaryFileUploadHandler",
]
# Maximum size, in bytes, of a request before it will be streamed to the
# file system instead of into memory.
FILE_UPLOAD_MAX_MEMORY_SIZE = 2621440 # i.e. 2.5 MB
# Maximum size in bytes of request data (excluding file uploads) that will be
# read before a SuspiciousOperation (RequestDataTooBig) is raised.
DATA_UPLOAD_MAX_MEMORY_SIZE = 2621440 # i.e. 2.5 MB
# Maximum number of GET/POST parameters that will be read before a
# SuspiciousOperation (TooManyFieldsSent) is raised.
DATA_UPLOAD_MAX_NUMBER_FIELDS = 1000
# Maximum number of files encoded in a multipart upload that will be read
# before a SuspiciousOperation (TooManyFilesSent) is raised.
DATA_UPLOAD_MAX_NUMBER_FILES = 100
# Directory in which upload streamed files will be temporarily saved. A value of
# `None` will make Django use the operating system's default temporary directory
# (i.e. "/tmp" on *nix systems).
FILE_UPLOAD_TEMP_DIR = None
# The numeric mode to set newly-uploaded files to. The value should be a mode
# you'd pass directly to os.chmod; see
# https://docs.python.org/library/os.html#files-and-directories.
FILE_UPLOAD_PERMISSIONS = 0o644
# The numeric mode to assign to newly-created directories, when uploading files.
# The value should be a mode as you'd pass to os.chmod;
# see https://docs.python.org/library/os.html#files-and-directories.
FILE_UPLOAD_DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS = None
# Python module path where user will place custom format definition.
# The directory where this setting is pointing should contain subdirectories
# named as the locales, containing a formats.py file
# (i.e. "myproject.locale" for myproject/locale/en/formats.py etc. use)
FORMAT_MODULE_PATH = None
# Default formatting for date objects. See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "N j, Y"
# Default formatting for datetime objects. See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATETIME_FORMAT = "N j, Y, P"
# Default formatting for time objects. See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
TIME_FORMAT = "P"
# Default formatting for date objects when only the year and month are relevant.
# See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
# Default formatting for date objects when only the month and day are relevant.
# See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "F j"
# Default short formatting for date objects. See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "m/d/Y"
# Default short formatting for datetime objects.
# See all available format strings here:
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "m/d/Y P"
# Default formats to be used when parsing dates from input boxes, in order
# See all available format string here:
# https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-behavior
# * Note that these format strings are different from the ones to display dates
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d", # '2006-10-25'
"%m/%d/%Y", # '10/25/2006'
"%m/%d/%y", # '10/25/06'
"%b %d %Y", # 'Oct 25 2006'
"%b %d, %Y", # 'Oct 25, 2006'
"%d %b %Y", # '25 Oct 2006'
"%d %b, %Y", # '25 Oct, 2006'
"%B %d %Y", # 'October 25 2006'
"%B %d, %Y", # 'October 25, 2006'
"%d %B %Y", # '25 October 2006'
"%d %B, %Y", # '25 October, 2006'
]
# Default formats to be used when parsing times from input boxes, in order
# See all available format string here:
# https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-behavior
# * Note that these format strings are different from the ones to display dates
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M:%S", # '14:30:59'
"%H:%M:%S.%f", # '14:30:59.000200'
"%H:%M", # '14:30'
]
# Default formats to be used when parsing dates and times from input boxes,
# in order
# See all available format string here:
# https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-behavior
# * Note that these format strings are different from the ones to display dates
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '10/25/2006 14:30:59'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '10/25/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M", # '10/25/2006 14:30'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S", # '10/25/06 14:30:59'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '10/25/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M", # '10/25/06 14:30'
]
# First day of week, to be used on calendars
# 0 means Sunday, 1 means Monday...
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 0
# Decimal separator symbol
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
# Boolean that sets whether to add thousand separator when formatting numbers
USE_THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = False
# Number of digits that will be together, when splitting them by
# THOUSAND_SEPARATOR. 0 means no grouping, 3 means splitting by thousands...
NUMBER_GROUPING = 0
# Thousand separator symbol
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
# The tablespaces to use for each model when not specified otherwise.
DEFAULT_TABLESPACE = ""
DEFAULT_INDEX_TABLESPACE = ""
# Default primary key field type.
DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD = "django.db.models.AutoField"
# Default X-Frame-Options header value
X_FRAME_OPTIONS = "DENY"
USE_X_FORWARDED_HOST = False
USE_X_FORWARDED_PORT = False
# The Python dotted path to the WSGI application that Django's internal server
# (runserver) will use. If `None`, the return value of
# 'django.core.wsgi.get_wsgi_application' is used, thus preserving the same
# behavior as previous versions of Django. Otherwise this should point to an
# actual WSGI application object.
WSGI_APPLICATION = None
# If your Django app is behind a proxy that sets a header to specify secure
# connections, AND that proxy ensures that user-submitted headers with the
# same name are ignored (so that people can't spoof it), set this value to
# a tuple of (header_name, header_value). For any requests that come in with
# that header/value, request.is_secure() will return True.
# WARNING! Only set this if you fully understand what you're doing. Otherwise,
# you may be opening yourself up to a security risk.
SECURE_PROXY_SSL_HEADER = None
##############
# MIDDLEWARE #
##############
# List of middleware to use. Order is important; in the request phase, these
# middleware will be applied in the order given, and in the response
# phase the middleware will be applied in reverse order.
MIDDLEWARE = []
############
# SESSIONS #
############
# Cache to store session data if using the cache session backend.
SESSION_CACHE_ALIAS = "default"
# Cookie name. This can be whatever you want.
SESSION_COOKIE_NAME = "sessionid"
# Age of cookie, in seconds (default: 2 weeks).
SESSION_COOKIE_AGE = 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 * 2
# A string like "example.com", or None for standard domain cookie.
SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN = None
# Whether the session cookie should be secure (https:// only).
SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE = False
# The path of the session cookie.
SESSION_COOKIE_PATH = "/"
# Whether to use the HttpOnly flag.
SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY = True
# Whether to set the flag restricting cookie leaks on cross-site requests.
# This can be 'Lax', 'Strict', 'None', or False to disable the flag.
SESSION_COOKIE_SAMESITE = "Lax"
# Whether to save the session data on every request.
SESSION_SAVE_EVERY_REQUEST = False
# Whether a user's session cookie expires when the web browser is closed.
SESSION_EXPIRE_AT_BROWSER_CLOSE = False
# The module to store session data
SESSION_ENGINE = "django.contrib.sessions.backends.db"
# Directory to store session files if using the file session module. If None,
# the backend will use a sensible default.
SESSION_FILE_PATH = None
# class to serialize session data
SESSION_SERIALIZER = "django.contrib.sessions.serializers.JSONSerializer"
#########
# CACHE #
#########
# The cache backends to use.
CACHES = {
"default": {
"BACKEND": "django.core.cache.backends.locmem.LocMemCache",
}
}
CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_KEY_PREFIX = ""
CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS = 600
CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_ALIAS = "default"
##################
# AUTHENTICATION #
##################
AUTH_USER_MODEL = "auth.User"
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = ["django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend"]
LOGIN_URL = "/accounts/login/"
LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL = "/accounts/profile/"
LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL = None
# The number of seconds a password reset link is valid for (default: 3 days).
PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT = 60 * 60 * 24 * 3
# the first hasher in this list is the preferred algorithm. any
# password using different algorithms will be converted automatically
# upon login
PASSWORD_HASHERS = [
"django.contrib.auth.hashers.PBKDF2PasswordHasher",
"django.contrib.auth.hashers.PBKDF2SHA1PasswordHasher",
"django.contrib.auth.hashers.Argon2PasswordHasher",
"django.contrib.auth.hashers.BCryptSHA256PasswordHasher",
"django.contrib.auth.hashers.ScryptPasswordHasher",
]
AUTH_PASSWORD_VALIDATORS = []
###########
# SIGNING #
###########
SIGNING_BACKEND = "django.core.signing.TimestampSigner"
########
# CSRF #
########
# Dotted path to callable to be used as view when a request is
# rejected by the CSRF middleware.
CSRF_FAILURE_VIEW = "django.views.csrf.csrf_failure"
# Settings for CSRF cookie.
CSRF_COOKIE_NAME = "csrftoken"
CSRF_COOKIE_AGE = 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 * 52
CSRF_COOKIE_DOMAIN = None
CSRF_COOKIE_PATH = "/"
CSRF_COOKIE_SECURE = False
CSRF_COOKIE_HTTPONLY = False
CSRF_COOKIE_SAMESITE = "Lax"
CSRF_HEADER_NAME = "HTTP_X_CSRFTOKEN"
CSRF_TRUSTED_ORIGINS = []
CSRF_USE_SESSIONS = False
# Whether to mask CSRF cookie value. It's a transitional setting helpful in
# migrating multiple instance of the same project to Django 4.1+.
CSRF_COOKIE_MASKED = False
############
# MESSAGES #
############
# Class to use as messages backend
MESSAGE_STORAGE = "django.contrib.messages.storage.fallback.FallbackStorage"
# Default values of MESSAGE_LEVEL and MESSAGE_TAGS are defined within
# django.contrib.messages to avoid imports in this settings file.
###########
# LOGGING #
###########
# The callable to use to configure logging
LOGGING_CONFIG = "logging.config.dictConfig"
# Custom logging configuration.
LOGGING = {}
# Default exception reporter class used in case none has been
# specifically assigned to the HttpRequest instance.
DEFAULT_EXCEPTION_REPORTER = "django.views.debug.ExceptionReporter"
# Default exception reporter filter class used in case none has been
# specifically assigned to the HttpRequest instance.
DEFAULT_EXCEPTION_REPORTER_FILTER = "django.views.debug.SafeExceptionReporterFilter"
###########
# TESTING #
###########
# The name of the class to use to run the test suite
TEST_RUNNER = "django.test.runner.DiscoverRunner"
# Apps that don't need to be serialized at test database creation time
# (only apps with migrations are to start with)
TEST_NON_SERIALIZED_APPS = []
############
# FIXTURES #
############
# The list of directories to search for fixtures
FIXTURE_DIRS = []
###############
# STATICFILES #
###############
# A list of locations of additional static files
STATICFILES_DIRS = []
# The default file storage backend used during the build process
STATICFILES_STORAGE = "django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage"
# List of finder classes that know how to find static files in
# various locations.
STATICFILES_FINDERS = [
"django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.FileSystemFinder",
"django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.AppDirectoriesFinder",
# 'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.DefaultStorageFinder',
]
##############
# MIGRATIONS #
##############
# Migration module overrides for apps, by app label.
MIGRATION_MODULES = {}
#################
# SYSTEM CHECKS #
#################
# List of all issues generated by system checks that should be silenced. Light
# issues like warnings, infos or debugs will not generate a message. Silencing
# serious issues like errors and criticals does not result in hiding the
# message, but Django will not stop you from e.g. running server.
SILENCED_SYSTEM_CHECKS = []
#######################
# SECURITY MIDDLEWARE #
#######################
SECURE_CONTENT_TYPE_NOSNIFF = True
SECURE_CROSS_ORIGIN_OPENER_POLICY = "same-origin"
SECURE_HSTS_INCLUDE_SUBDOMAINS = False
SECURE_HSTS_PRELOAD = False
SECURE_HSTS_SECONDS = 0
SECURE_REDIRECT_EXEMPT = []
SECURE_REFERRER_POLICY = "same-origin"
SECURE_SSL_HOST = None
SECURE_SSL_REDIRECT = False

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@ -0,0 +1,623 @@
"""
LANG_INFO is a dictionary structure to provide meta information about languages.
About name_local: capitalize it as if your language name was appearing
inside a sentence in your language.
The 'fallback' key can be used to specify a special fallback logic which doesn't
follow the traditional 'fr-ca' -> 'fr' fallback logic.
"""
LANG_INFO = {
"af": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "af",
"name": "Afrikaans",
"name_local": "Afrikaans",
},
"ar": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "ar",
"name": "Arabic",
"name_local": "العربيّة",
},
"ar-dz": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "ar-dz",
"name": "Algerian Arabic",
"name_local": "العربية الجزائرية",
},
"ast": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ast",
"name": "Asturian",
"name_local": "asturianu",
},
"az": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "az",
"name": "Azerbaijani",
"name_local": "Azərbaycanca",
},
"be": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "be",
"name": "Belarusian",
"name_local": "беларуская",
},
"bg": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "bg",
"name": "Bulgarian",
"name_local": "български",
},
"bn": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "bn",
"name": "Bengali",
"name_local": "বাংলা",
},
"br": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "br",
"name": "Breton",
"name_local": "brezhoneg",
},
"bs": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "bs",
"name": "Bosnian",
"name_local": "bosanski",
},
"ca": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ca",
"name": "Catalan",
"name_local": "català",
},
"ckb": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "ckb",
"name": "Central Kurdish (Sorani)",
"name_local": "کوردی",
},
"cs": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "cs",
"name": "Czech",
"name_local": "česky",
},
"cy": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "cy",
"name": "Welsh",
"name_local": "Cymraeg",
},
"da": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "da",
"name": "Danish",
"name_local": "dansk",
},
"de": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "de",
"name": "German",
"name_local": "Deutsch",
},
"dsb": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "dsb",
"name": "Lower Sorbian",
"name_local": "dolnoserbski",
},
"el": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "el",
"name": "Greek",
"name_local": "Ελληνικά",
},
"en": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "en",
"name": "English",
"name_local": "English",
},
"en-au": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "en-au",
"name": "Australian English",
"name_local": "Australian English",
},
"en-gb": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "en-gb",
"name": "British English",
"name_local": "British English",
},
"eo": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "eo",
"name": "Esperanto",
"name_local": "Esperanto",
},
"es": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es",
"name": "Spanish",
"name_local": "español",
},
"es-ar": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es-ar",
"name": "Argentinian Spanish",
"name_local": "español de Argentina",
},
"es-co": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es-co",
"name": "Colombian Spanish",
"name_local": "español de Colombia",
},
"es-mx": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es-mx",
"name": "Mexican Spanish",
"name_local": "español de Mexico",
},
"es-ni": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es-ni",
"name": "Nicaraguan Spanish",
"name_local": "español de Nicaragua",
},
"es-ve": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "es-ve",
"name": "Venezuelan Spanish",
"name_local": "español de Venezuela",
},
"et": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "et",
"name": "Estonian",
"name_local": "eesti",
},
"eu": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "eu",
"name": "Basque",
"name_local": "Basque",
},
"fa": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "fa",
"name": "Persian",
"name_local": "فارسی",
},
"fi": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "fi",
"name": "Finnish",
"name_local": "suomi",
},
"fr": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "fr",
"name": "French",
"name_local": "français",
},
"fy": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "fy",
"name": "Frisian",
"name_local": "frysk",
},
"ga": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ga",
"name": "Irish",
"name_local": "Gaeilge",
},
"gd": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "gd",
"name": "Scottish Gaelic",
"name_local": "Gàidhlig",
},
"gl": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "gl",
"name": "Galician",
"name_local": "galego",
},
"he": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "he",
"name": "Hebrew",
"name_local": "עברית",
},
"hi": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "hi",
"name": "Hindi",
"name_local": "हिंदी",
},
"hr": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "hr",
"name": "Croatian",
"name_local": "Hrvatski",
},
"hsb": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "hsb",
"name": "Upper Sorbian",
"name_local": "hornjoserbsce",
},
"hu": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "hu",
"name": "Hungarian",
"name_local": "Magyar",
},
"hy": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "hy",
"name": "Armenian",
"name_local": "հայերեն",
},
"ia": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ia",
"name": "Interlingua",
"name_local": "Interlingua",
},
"io": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "io",
"name": "Ido",
"name_local": "ido",
},
"id": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "id",
"name": "Indonesian",
"name_local": "Bahasa Indonesia",
},
"ig": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ig",
"name": "Igbo",
"name_local": "Asụsụ Ìgbò",
},
"is": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "is",
"name": "Icelandic",
"name_local": "Íslenska",
},
"it": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "it",
"name": "Italian",
"name_local": "italiano",
},
"ja": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ja",
"name": "Japanese",
"name_local": "日本語",
},
"ka": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ka",
"name": "Georgian",
"name_local": "ქართული",
},
"kab": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "kab",
"name": "Kabyle",
"name_local": "taqbaylit",
},
"kk": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "kk",
"name": "Kazakh",
"name_local": "Қазақ",
},
"km": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "km",
"name": "Khmer",
"name_local": "Khmer",
},
"kn": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "kn",
"name": "Kannada",
"name_local": "Kannada",
},
"ko": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ko",
"name": "Korean",
"name_local": "한국어",
},
"ky": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ky",
"name": "Kyrgyz",
"name_local": "Кыргызча",
},
"lb": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "lb",
"name": "Luxembourgish",
"name_local": "Lëtzebuergesch",
},
"lt": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "lt",
"name": "Lithuanian",
"name_local": "Lietuviškai",
},
"lv": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "lv",
"name": "Latvian",
"name_local": "latviešu",
},
"mk": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "mk",
"name": "Macedonian",
"name_local": "Македонски",
},
"ml": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ml",
"name": "Malayalam",
"name_local": "മലയാളം",
},
"mn": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "mn",
"name": "Mongolian",
"name_local": "Mongolian",
},
"mr": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "mr",
"name": "Marathi",
"name_local": "मराठी",
},
"ms": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ms",
"name": "Malay",
"name_local": "Bahasa Melayu",
},
"my": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "my",
"name": "Burmese",
"name_local": "မြန်မာဘာသာ",
},
"nb": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "nb",
"name": "Norwegian Bokmal",
"name_local": "norsk (bokmål)",
},
"ne": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ne",
"name": "Nepali",
"name_local": "नेपाली",
},
"nl": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "nl",
"name": "Dutch",
"name_local": "Nederlands",
},
"nn": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "nn",
"name": "Norwegian Nynorsk",
"name_local": "norsk (nynorsk)",
},
"no": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "no",
"name": "Norwegian",
"name_local": "norsk",
},
"os": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "os",
"name": "Ossetic",
"name_local": "Ирон",
},
"pa": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "pa",
"name": "Punjabi",
"name_local": "Punjabi",
},
"pl": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "pl",
"name": "Polish",
"name_local": "polski",
},
"pt": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "pt",
"name": "Portuguese",
"name_local": "Português",
},
"pt-br": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "pt-br",
"name": "Brazilian Portuguese",
"name_local": "Português Brasileiro",
},
"ro": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ro",
"name": "Romanian",
"name_local": "Română",
},
"ru": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ru",
"name": "Russian",
"name_local": "Русский",
},
"sk": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sk",
"name": "Slovak",
"name_local": "Slovensky",
},
"sl": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sl",
"name": "Slovenian",
"name_local": "Slovenščina",
},
"sq": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sq",
"name": "Albanian",
"name_local": "shqip",
},
"sr": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sr",
"name": "Serbian",
"name_local": "српски",
},
"sr-latn": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sr-latn",
"name": "Serbian Latin",
"name_local": "srpski (latinica)",
},
"sv": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sv",
"name": "Swedish",
"name_local": "svenska",
},
"sw": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "sw",
"name": "Swahili",
"name_local": "Kiswahili",
},
"ta": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "ta",
"name": "Tamil",
"name_local": "தமிழ்",
},
"te": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "te",
"name": "Telugu",
"name_local": "తెలుగు",
},
"tg": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "tg",
"name": "Tajik",
"name_local": "тоҷикӣ",
},
"th": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "th",
"name": "Thai",
"name_local": "ภาษาไทย",
},
"tk": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "tk",
"name": "Turkmen",
"name_local": "Türkmençe",
},
"tr": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "tr",
"name": "Turkish",
"name_local": "Türkçe",
},
"tt": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "tt",
"name": "Tatar",
"name_local": "Татарча",
},
"udm": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "udm",
"name": "Udmurt",
"name_local": "Удмурт",
},
"uk": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "uk",
"name": "Ukrainian",
"name_local": "Українська",
},
"ur": {
"bidi": True,
"code": "ur",
"name": "Urdu",
"name_local": "اردو",
},
"uz": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "uz",
"name": "Uzbek",
"name_local": "oʻzbek tili",
},
"vi": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "vi",
"name": "Vietnamese",
"name_local": "Tiếng Việt",
},
"zh-cn": {
"fallback": ["zh-hans"],
},
"zh-hans": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "zh-hans",
"name": "Simplified Chinese",
"name_local": "简体中文",
},
"zh-hant": {
"bidi": False,
"code": "zh-hant",
"name": "Traditional Chinese",
"name_local": "繁體中文",
},
"zh-hk": {
"fallback": ["zh-hant"],
},
"zh-mo": {
"fallback": ["zh-hant"],
},
"zh-my": {
"fallback": ["zh-hans"],
},
"zh-sg": {
"fallback": ["zh-hans"],
},
"zh-tw": {
"fallback": ["zh-hant"],
},
}

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j F، Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "g:i A"
# DATETIME_FORMAT =
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y"
# SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT =
# FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK =
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
# DATE_INPUT_FORMATS =
# TIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
# DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
# NUMBER_GROUPING =

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j F Y H:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "j F Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "j F Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 0 # Sunday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y/%m/%d", # '2006/10/25'
]
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M", # '14:30
"%H:%M:%S", # '14:30:59'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y/%m/%d %H:%M", # '2006/10/25 14:30'
"%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006/10/25 14:30:59'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j E Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "G:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j E Y, G:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d.m.Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y", # '25.10.2006'
"%d.%m.%y", # '25.10.06'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M", # '25.10.2006 14:30'
"%d.%m.%y %H:%M:%S", # '25.10.06 14:30:59'
"%d.%m.%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25.10.06 14:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%y %H:%M", # '25.10.06 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" # non-breaking space
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "d F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
# DATETIME_FORMAT =
# YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT =
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
# SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT =
# FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK =
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
# DATE_INPUT_FORMATS =
# TIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
# DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = " " # Non-breaking space
# NUMBER_GROUPING =

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j F, Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "g:i A"
# DATETIME_FORMAT =
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "j M, Y"
# SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT =
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 6 # Saturday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # 25/10/2016
"%d/%m/%y", # 25/10/16
"%d-%m-%Y", # 25-10-2016
"%d-%m-%y", # 25-10-16
]
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M:%S", # 14:30:59
"%H:%M", # 14:30
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # 25/10/2006 14:30:59
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # 25/10/2006 14:30
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
# NUMBER_GROUPING =

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j. N Y."
TIME_FORMAT = "G:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j. N. Y. G:i T"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y."
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j. F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "Y M j"
# SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT =
# FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK =
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
# DATE_INPUT_FORMATS =
# TIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
# DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
# NUMBER_GROUPING =

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = r"j E \d\e Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "G:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = r"j E \d\e Y \a \l\e\s G:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = r"F \d\e\l Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = r"j E"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y G:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '31/12/2009'
"%d/%m/%y", # '31/12/09'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S",
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f",
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M",
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "G:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j F Y، کاتژمێر G:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "Y/n/j"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "Y/n/j، G:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 6
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
# DATE_INPUT_FORMATS =
# TIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
# DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS =
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
# NUMBER_GROUPING =

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j. E Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "G:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j. E Y G:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j. F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d.m.Y G:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y", # '05.01.2006'
"%d.%m.%y", # '05.01.06'
"%d. %m. %Y", # '5. 1. 2006'
"%d. %m. %y", # '5. 1. 06'
# "%d. %B %Y", # '25. October 2006'
# "%d. %b. %Y", # '25. Oct. 2006'
]
# Kept ISO formats as one is in first position
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M:%S", # '04:30:59'
"%H.%M", # '04.30'
"%H:%M", # '04:30'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S", # '05.01.2006 04:30:59'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '05.01.2006 04:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%Y %H.%M", # '05.01.2006 04.30'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M", # '05.01.2006 04:30'
"%d. %m. %Y %H:%M:%S", # '05. 01. 2006 04:30:59'
"%d. %m. %Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '05. 01. 2006 04:30:59.000200'
"%d. %m. %Y %H.%M", # '05. 01. 2006 04.30'
"%d. %m. %Y %H:%M", # '05. 01. 2006 04:30'
"%Y-%m-%d %H.%M", # '2006-01-05 04.30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" # non-breaking space
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j F Y" # '25 Hydref 2006'
TIME_FORMAT = "P" # '2:30 y.b.'
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j F Y, P" # '25 Hydref 2006, 2:30 y.b.'
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y" # 'Hydref 2006'
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F" # '25 Hydref'
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y" # '25/10/2006'
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y P" # '25/10/2006 2:30 y.b.'
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # 'Dydd Llun'
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '25/10/2006'
"%d/%m/%y", # '25/10/06'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # '25/10/2006 14:30'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/06 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M", # '25/10/06 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j. F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j. F Y H:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j. F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d.m.Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y", # '25.10.2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M", # '25.10.2006 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j. F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j. F Y H:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j. F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d.m.Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y", # '25.10.2006'
"%d.%m.%y", # '25.10.06'
# "%d. %B %Y", # '25. October 2006'
# "%d. %b. %Y", # '25. Oct. 2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M", # '25.10.2006 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j. F Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j. F Y H:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j. F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d.m.Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d.m.Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y", # '25.10.2006'
"%d.%m.%y", # '25.10.06'
# "%d. %B %Y", # '25. October 2006'
# "%d. %b. %Y", # '25. Oct. 2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25.10.2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d.%m.%Y %H:%M", # '25.10.2006 14:30'
]
# these are the separators for non-monetary numbers. For monetary numbers,
# the DECIMAL_SEPARATOR is a . (decimal point) and the THOUSAND_SEPARATOR is a
# ' (single quote).
# For details, please refer to the documentation and the following link:
# https://www.bk.admin.ch/bk/de/home/dokumentation/sprachen/hilfsmittel-textredaktion/schreibweisungen.html
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" # non-breaking space
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "P"
DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y P"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y P"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 0 # Sunday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '25/10/2006'
"%d/%m/%y", # '25/10/06'
"%Y-%m-%d", # '2006-10-25'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # '25/10/2006 14:30'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/06 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M", # '25/10/06 14:30'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "."
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
# Formatting for date objects.
DATE_FORMAT = "N j, Y"
# Formatting for time objects.
TIME_FORMAT = "P"
# Formatting for datetime objects.
DATETIME_FORMAT = "N j, Y, P"
# Formatting for date objects when only the year and month are relevant.
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y"
# Formatting for date objects when only the month and day are relevant.
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "F j"
# Short formatting for date objects.
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "m/d/Y"
# Short formatting for datetime objects.
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "m/d/Y P"
# First day of week, to be used on calendars.
# 0 means Sunday, 1 means Monday...
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 0
# Formats to be used when parsing dates from input boxes, in order.
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
# Note that these format strings are different from the ones to display dates.
# Kept ISO formats as they are in first position
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d", # '2006-10-25'
"%m/%d/%Y", # '10/25/2006'
"%m/%d/%y", # '10/25/06'
"%b %d %Y", # 'Oct 25 2006'
"%b %d, %Y", # 'Oct 25, 2006'
"%d %b %Y", # '25 Oct 2006'
"%d %b, %Y", # '25 Oct, 2006'
"%B %d %Y", # 'October 25 2006'
"%B %d, %Y", # 'October 25, 2006'
"%d %B %Y", # '25 October 2006'
"%d %B, %Y", # '25 October, 2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '10/25/2006 14:30:59'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '10/25/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%m/%d/%Y %H:%M", # '10/25/2006 14:30'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S", # '10/25/06 14:30:59'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '10/25/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%m/%d/%y %H:%M", # '10/25/06 14:30'
]
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M:%S", # '14:30:59'
"%H:%M:%S.%f", # '14:30:59.000200'
"%H:%M", # '14:30'
]
# Decimal separator symbol.
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
# Thousand separator symbol.
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
# Number of digits that will be together, when splitting them by
# THOUSAND_SEPARATOR. 0 means no grouping, 3 means splitting by thousands.
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j M Y" # '25 Oct 2006'
TIME_FORMAT = "P" # '2:30 p.m.'
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j M Y, P" # '25 Oct 2006, 2:30 p.m.'
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y" # 'October 2006'
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F" # '25 October'
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y" # '25/10/2006'
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y P" # '25/10/2006 2:30 p.m.'
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 0 # Sunday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '25/10/2006'
"%d/%m/%y", # '25/10/06'
# "%b %d %Y", # 'Oct 25 2006'
# "%b %d, %Y", # 'Oct 25, 2006'
# "%d %b %Y", # '25 Oct 2006'
# "%d %b, %Y", # '25 Oct, 2006'
# "%B %d %Y", # 'October 25 2006'
# "%B %d, %Y", # 'October 25, 2006'
# "%d %B %Y", # '25 October 2006'
# "%d %B, %Y", # '25 October, 2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # '25/10/2006 14:30'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/06 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M", # '25/10/06 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = "j M Y" # '25 Oct 2006'
TIME_FORMAT = "P" # '2:30 p.m.'
DATETIME_FORMAT = "j M Y, P" # '25 Oct 2006, 2:30 p.m.'
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = "F Y" # 'October 2006'
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = "j F" # '25 October'
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y" # '25/10/2006'
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y P" # '25/10/2006 2:30 p.m.'
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '25/10/2006'
"%d/%m/%y", # '25/10/06'
# "%b %d %Y", # 'Oct 25 2006'
# "%b %d, %Y", # 'Oct 25, 2006'
# "%d %b %Y", # '25 Oct 2006'
# "%d %b, %Y", # '25 Oct, 2006'
# "%B %d %Y", # 'October 25 2006'
# "%B %d, %Y", # 'October 25, 2006'
# "%d %B %Y", # '25 October 2006'
# "%d %B, %Y", # '25 October, 2006'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f", # '2006-10-25 14:30:59.000200'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '2006-10-25 14:30'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/2006 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # '25/10/2006 14:30'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S", # '25/10/06 14:30:59'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f", # '25/10/06 14:30:59.000200'
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M", # '25/10/06 14:30'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = "."
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = ","
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = r"j\-\a \d\e F Y" # '26-a de julio 1887'
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i" # '18:59'
DATETIME_FORMAT = r"j\-\a \d\e F Y\, \j\e H:i" # '26-a de julio 1887, je 18:59'
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = r"F \d\e Y" # 'julio de 1887'
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = r"j\-\a \d\e F" # '26-a de julio'
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "Y-m-d" # '1887-07-26'
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "Y-m-d H:i" # '1887-07-26 18:59'
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday (lundo)
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d", # '1887-07-26'
"%y-%m-%d", # '87-07-26'
"%Y %m %d", # '1887 07 26'
"%Y.%m.%d", # '1887.07.26'
"%d-a de %b %Y", # '26-a de jul 1887'
"%d %b %Y", # '26 jul 1887'
"%d-a de %B %Y", # '26-a de julio 1887'
"%d %B %Y", # '26 julio 1887'
"%d %m %Y", # '26 07 1887'
"%d/%m/%Y", # '26/07/1887'
]
TIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%H:%M:%S", # '18:59:00'
"%H:%M", # '18:59'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '1887-07-26 18:59:00'
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '1887-07-26 18:59'
"%Y.%m.%d %H:%M:%S", # '1887.07.26 18:59:00'
"%Y.%m.%d %H:%M", # '1887.07.26 18:59'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S", # '26/07/1887 18:59:00'
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M", # '26/07/1887 18:59'
"%y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", # '87-07-26 18:59:00'
"%y-%m-%d %H:%M", # '87-07-26 18:59'
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" # non-breaking space
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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# This file is distributed under the same license as the Django package.
#
# The *_FORMAT strings use the Django date format syntax,
# see https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#date
DATE_FORMAT = r"j \d\e F \d\e Y"
TIME_FORMAT = "H:i"
DATETIME_FORMAT = r"j \d\e F \d\e Y \a \l\a\s H:i"
YEAR_MONTH_FORMAT = r"F \d\e Y"
MONTH_DAY_FORMAT = r"j \d\e F"
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT = "d/m/Y"
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT = "d/m/Y H:i"
FIRST_DAY_OF_WEEK = 1 # Monday
# The *_INPUT_FORMATS strings use the Python strftime format syntax,
# see https://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior
DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y", # '31/12/2009'
"%d/%m/%y", # '31/12/09'
]
DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS = [
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S",
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S.%f",
"%d/%m/%Y %H:%M",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M:%S.%f",
"%d/%m/%y %H:%M",
]
DECIMAL_SEPARATOR = ","
THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = "\xa0" # non-breaking space
NUMBER_GROUPING = 3

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