From 7e951c92f327db7193e58881ad08dbd3b07ba55f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Adrian Holovaty Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2005 15:23:34 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Changed tutorial01 to clarify how to set an environment variable in Windows. Thanks, JZ! git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@146 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37 --- docs/tutorial01.txt | 8 ++++++-- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/tutorial01.txt b/docs/tutorial01.txt index b4b11049c6..27ef474ef8 100644 --- a/docs/tutorial01.txt +++ b/docs/tutorial01.txt @@ -62,9 +62,13 @@ interactive prompt.) Once you've done that, you need to tell Django which settings module you're currently using. Do that by setting an environment variable, -``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE``:: +``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE``. Here's how you do that in the Bash shell on Unix:: - export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE='myproject.settings.main' + export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=myproject.settings.main + +On Windows, you'd use ``set`` instead:: + + set DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=myproject.settings.main Note this path is in Python package syntax. Your project has to be somewhere on your `Python path`_ -- so that the Python statement ``import myproject.settings.main``