Chris's Wiki :: blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorry Commentshttps://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorry?atomcommentsDWiki2020-04-30T01:25:16ZRecent comments in Chris's Wiki :: blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorry.By Chris Siebenmann on /blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorrytag:CSpace:blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorry:50e1bda46d95bfcbe4a8d39493affcc981277fbfChris Siebenmann<div class="wikitext"><p>If I've got the place you mean right, I do indeed mean a 'can' there.
I know that the problem happens sporadically in our real application
on Django 1.11. If I can reproduce it in a test application under 1.11,
I can then move that test application forward to Python 3 and a current
Django to see if it still happens; if it doesn't, I can have a reasonable
confidence that it also won't with our real application and I can start
the work to move the real application forward.</p>
<p>(If I can't reproduce it with a test application, we have no path forward.
If I can still reproduce the problem in the updated test application
under a current Django, well, at least I can file a bug report with a
small test application.)</p>
</div>2020-04-30T01:25:16ZBy Christopher Barts on /blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorrytag:CSpace:blog/python/DjangoBasicAuthWorry:741c3886e78cb7832a2e8995f26b8681aec68327Christopher Barts<div class="wikitext"><p>I think you have a 'can' where you intend to have a 'can't' in the first sentence of the next-to-last paragraph.</p>
</div>2020-04-30T00:33:12Z