Part of this chapter is based on tutorials by Geek Girls Carrots (http://django.carrots.pl/).
Parts of this chapter is based on the django-marcador tutorial licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. The django-marcador tutorial is copyrighted by Markus Zapke-Gründemann et al.
Before we install Django, we'll get you to install an extremely useful tool that will help keep your coding environment tidy on your computer. It's possible to skip this step, but it's highly recommended not to - starting with the best possible setup will save you a lot of trouble in the future!
So, let's create a virtual environment (also called a virtualenv). It will isolate your Python/Django setup on a per-project basis, meaning that any changes you make to one website won't affect any others you're also developing. Neat, right?
All you need to do is find a directory in which you want to create the virtualenv
; your home directory, for example. On Windows it might look like C:\Users\Name\
(where Name
is the name of your login).
For this tutorial we will be using a new directory djangogirls
from your home directory:
mkdir djangogirls
We will make a virtualenv called myvenv
. The general command will be in the format:
python -m venv `name_of_venv`.
To create a new virtualenv
, you need to open the console (we told you about that a few tutorials ago - remember?) and run C:\Python\python -m venv venv
. It will look like this:
C:\Users\Name\djangogirls> C:\Python34\python -m venv myvenv
where C:\Python34\python
is the directory in which you previously installed Python and myvenv
is the name of your virtualenv
. You can use any other name, but stick to lowercase and use no spaces. It is also good idea to keep the name short - you'll be referencing it a lot!
Creating a virtualenv
on both Linux and OS X is as simple as running:
~/djangogirls$ python3 -m venv myvenv
NOTE: Initiating the virtual environment on Ubuntu 14.04 like this currently gives the following error:
Error: Command '['/home/eddie/Slask/tmp/venv/bin/python3', '-Im', 'ensurepip', '--upgrade', '--default-pip']' returned non-zero exit status 1
To get around this, use the
virtualenv
command instead.
~/djangogirls$ sudo apt-get install python-virtualenv ~/djangogirls$ virtualenv myvenv
The command above will create a directory called myvenv
that contains our virtual environment (basically bunch of directory and files). All we want to do now is starting it by running:
C:\Users\Name\djangogirls> myvenv\Scripts\activate
on Windows, or:
~/djangogirls$ source myvenv/bin/activate
on OS X and Linux.
NOTE: sometimes
source
might not be available. In those cases try doing this instead:
~/djangogirls$ . myvenv/bin/activate
You will know that you have virtualenv
started when you see that the prompt in your console looks like:
(myvenv) C:\Users\Name\djangogirls>
or:
(myvenv) ~/djangogirls$
Notice the prefix (myvenv)
appears!
When working within a virtual environment, python
will automatically refer to the correct version so you can use python
instead of python3
.
OK, we have all important dependencies in place. We can finally install Django!
Now that you have your virtualenv
started, you can install Django using pip
. In the console, run pip install django==1.6.5
(note that we use a double equal sign: ==
).
(myvenv) ~$ pip install django==1.6.5
Downloading/unpacking django==1.6.5
Installing collected packages: django
Successfully installed django
Cleaning up...
If you get an error when calling pip on Ubuntu 12.04 please run
python -m pip install -U --force-reinstall pip
to fix the pip installation in the virtualenv.
That's it! You're now (finally) ready to create a Django application! But to do that, you need a nice program to write your code in...