Q1. To cache your entire site for an application in Django, you add all except which of these settings?
- django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware
- django.middleware.cache.UpdateCacheMiddleware
- django.middleware.cache.FetchFromCacheMiddleware
- django.middleware.cache.AcceleratedCacheMiddleware
- C++
- Java
- Python
- Ruby
Q3. To automatically provide a value for a field, or to do validation that requires access to more than a single field, you should override the ___
method in the ___
class.
- validate(); Model
- group(); Model
- validate(); Form
- clean(); Field
Q4. A client wants their site to be able to load "Rick & Morty" episodes by number or by title—e.g., shows/3/3 or shows/picklerick. Which URL pattern do you recommend?
- url(r'shows/int:season/int:episode/', views.episode_number)
- path('shows/int:season/int:episode/', views.episode_number),
- path('shows/int:season/int:episode', views.episode_number),
- url(r'^show/(?P[0-9]+)/(?P[0-9]+)/$', views.episode_number),
- Raise MiddlewareNotUsed in the init function of your middleware.
- Implement the not_used method in your middleware class.
- List the middleware beneath an entry of django.middleware.IgnoredMiddleware.
- Write code to remove the middleware from the settings in [app]/init.py.
- Place that section between paragraph tags containing the autoescape=off switch.
- Wrap that section between { percentage mark autoescape off percentage mark} and {percentage mark endautoescape percentage mark} tags.
- Wrap that section between {percentage mark autoescapeoff percentage mark} and {percentage mark endautoescapeoff percentage mark} tags.
- You don't need to do anything—autoescaping is off by default.
- Check that the bin folder inside your Django directory is on your system path.
- Make sure you have activated the virtual environment you have set up containing Django.
- Check that you have installed Django.
- Make sure that you have created a Django project.
Q8. Every time a user is saved, their quiz_score needs to be recalculated. Where might be an ideal place to add this logic?
- template
- model
- database
- view
- Rainbow {}
- export Rainbow:
- class Rainbow:
- def Rainbow:
Q10. You have inherited a Django project and need to get it running locally. It comes with a requirements.txt file containing all its dependencies. Which command should you use?
- django-admin startproject requirements.txt
- python install -r requirements.txt
- pip install -r requirements.txt
- pip install Django
- To make sure that your migrations are up to date, you should run updatemigrations before running your tests.
- You should back up your production database before running a migration.
- Your migration code should be under source control.
- If a project has a lot of data, you should test against a staging copy before running the migration on production.
- a string beginning with the letter Ra string beginning with the letter R
- an empty string at the server root
- a string containing ^ and
$a string containing ^ and $ - an empty string anywhere in the URLan empty string anywhere in the URL
- URL > view > template
- form > model > view
- template > view > model
- URL > template > view > model
Q14. Django's class-based generic views provide which classes that implement common web development tasks?
- concrete
- thread-safe
- abstract
- dynamic
- template syntax
- HTML and template syntax
- Python, HTML, and template syntax
- Python and template syntax
- [x]
class Star(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
class Constellation(models.Model):
stars = models.ManyToManyField(Star)
- [ ]
class Star(models.Model):
constellation = models.ForeignKey(Constellation, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
class Constellation(models.Model):
stars = models.ForeignKey(Star, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
- [ ]
class Star(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
class Constellation(models.Model):
stars = models.OneToManyField(Star)
- [ ]
class Star(models.Model):
constellation = models.ManyToManyField(Constellation)
class Constellation(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
Q18. Which is NOT a valid step in configuring your Django 2.x instance to serve up static files such as images or CSS?
- In your urls file, add a pattern that includes the name of your static directory.
- Create a directory named static inside your app directory.
- Create a directory named after the app under the static directory, and place static files inside.
- Use the template tag {percentage mark load static percentage mark}.
- Set a session variable.
- Use a global variable.
- Add a dictionary to the template context.
- Use RequestContext.
- No. Using a custom user model could break the admin interface and some third-party apps.
- Yes. It is easier to make changes once it goes into production.
- No. Django's built-in models.User class has been tried and tested—no point in reinventing the wheel.
- Yes, as there is no other option.
Q21. You want to create a page that allows editing of two classes connected by a foreign key (e.g., a question and answer that reside in separate tables). What Django feature can you use?
- actions
- admin
- mezcal
- inlines
- The results of a QuerySet are not ordered.
- QuerySets do not create any database activity until they are evaluated.
- QuerySets do not load objects into memory until they are needed.
- Using QuerySets, you cannot execute more complex queries.
Q23. You receive a MultiValueDictKeyError
when trying to access a request parameter with the following code: request.GET['search_term']. Which solution will NOT help you in this scenario?
- Switch to using POST instead of GET as the request method.
- Make sure the input field in your form is also named "search_term".
- Use MultiValueDict's GET method instead of hitting the dictionary directly like this: request.GET.get('search_term', '').
- Check if the search_term parameter is present in the request before attempting to access it.
- show_fields()
- as_p()
- as_table()
- fields()
- Fork the Django repository GitHub.
- Submit a pull request.
- all of these answers.
- Run Django's test suite.
Q26. Django supplies sensible default values for settings. In which Python module can you find these settings?
- django.utils.default_settings.py
- django.utils.global_settings.py
- django.conf.default_settings.py
- django.conf.global_settings.py
- numFingers
- number-of-Fingers
- number_of_fingers
- finger_num
- Manually merge your migration files to reduce the number
- Don't worry about the number
- Try to minimize the number of migrations
- Use squashmigrations to reduce the number
- perform db operations without fetching a model object
- define db transaction isolation levels
- use aggregate functions more easily
- build reusable QuerySets
- SmallIntegerField
- NegativeIntegerField
- BigAutoField
- PositiveIntegerField
- print (django.version)
- import django django.getVersion()
- import django django.get_version()
- python -c django --version
- READ; WRITE
- GET; POST
- POST; GET
- GET; PATCH
- when efficiency is important
- when you want the data to be cached
- when you want to use your browser to help with debugging
- when the data in the form may be sensitive
- if your single installation powers more than one site
- if you need to serve static as well as dynamic content
- if you want your app have a fully qualified domain name
- if you are expecting more than 10.000 users
title=models.charfield(max_length=100, validators=[validate_spelling])
- inizialized array called validators
- a validators file containing a function called validate_spelling imported at the top of model
- a validators file containing a function called validate imported at the top of model
- spelling package imported at the top of model
- require_safe()
- require_put()
- require_post()
- require_get()
- [ ]
class Author (models.model):
book=models.foreignkey(Book,on_delete=models.cascade)
class Book(models.model):
name=models.charfield(max_length=100)
- [x]
class Author (models.model):
name=models.charfield(max_length=100)
class Book(models.model):
author=models.foreignkey(Author,on_delete=models.cascade)
- [ ]
class Author (models.model):
name=models.charfield(max_length=100)
class Book(models.model):
author=models.foreignkey(Author)
- [ ]
class Author (models.model):
name=models.charfield(max_length=100)
class Book(models.model):
author=models.foreignkey(Author,on_delete=models.cascade)
- [ ]
class Author (models.model):
name=models.charfield(max_length=100)
class Book(models.model):
author=Author.name
- validator
- deodorizer
- mediator
- regular expression
Q39. To secure an API endpoint, making it accessible to registered users only, you can replace the rest_framework.permissions.allowAny value in the default_permissions section of your settings.py to
- rest_framework.permissions.IsAdminUser
- rest_framework.permissions.IsAuthenticated
- rest_framework.permissions.IsAuthorized
- rest_framework.permissions.IsRegistered
- makemigration
- update_db
- applymigration
- migrate
Q41. Which type of class allows QuerySets and model instances to be converted to native Python data types for use in APIs?
- objectwriters
- serializers
- picklers
- viewsets
{ percentage if spark >= 50 percentage }
Lots of spark
{percentage elif spark == 42 percentage}
- { percentage else percentage}
- {percentage endif percentage}
- Nothing needed
- {percentage end percentage}
from rest_framework import serializers
from .models import Planet
- [x]
class PlanetSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model=Planet
fields=('name','position', 'mass', 'rings')
- [ ]
from rest_framework import serializers
from .models import Planet
class PlanetSerializer():
class Meta:
fields=('name','position', 'mass', 'rings')
model=Planet
- [ ]
from django.db import serializers
from .models import Planet
class PlanetSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
fields=('name','position', 'mass', 'rings')
model=Sandwich
- [ ]
from django.db import serializers
from .models import Planet
class PlanetSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
fields=('name')
model=Planet
Q44 Which class allows you to automatically create a Serializer class with fields and validators that correspond to your model's fields?
- ModelSerializer
- Model
- DataSerializer
- ModelToSerializer
- django-admin setup
- django-admin runserver
- python manage.py createuser
- python manage.py createsuperuser
- you should set up a new virtualenv for each Django project
- They should not be used
- Use the same venv for all your Django work
- Use a new venv for each Django app
- migrate.py
- wsgi.py
- manage.py
- runserver
- models
- controllers
- programmers
- clients
- Loose Coupling
- Less Code
- Fast Development
- Implicit over explicit
{{"live long and prosper"|truncate:3}}
- live long and ...
- live long and
- a compilation error
- liv
1 sandwiches = Sandwich.objects.filter(is_vegan=True)
2 for sandwich in sandwiches:
3 print(sandwich.name + " - " + sandwich.spice_level)
- line 1
- It depends on how many results return by query.
- It depends on cache.
- line 2
Q52. You are building a web application using a React front end and a Django back end. For what will you need to provision?**
- an NGINX web server
- a NoSQL database
- a larger hard drive
- CORS middleware
- an HTTP request
- a JSON object
- a query
- a serializer
Q54. How would you stop Django from performing database table creation or deletion operations via migrations for a particular model?**
- Run the
migrate
command with--exclude=[model_name]
. - Move the model definition from
models.py
into its own file. - Set
managed=False
inside the model. - Don't run the
migrate
command.
- has_changed()
- its_changed()
- has_updated()
- None of This
- a server
- an interface specification
- a Python module
- a framework
- DetailView
- TittleView
- SongView
- ListView
Q55. Which statement is most acurate, regarding using the default SQLite database on your local/development machine but Postgres in production
- There's less chance of introducing bugs since SQLite already works out the box
- It's fine, you just need to keep both instances synchronized
- It's a bad idea and could lead to issues down the road
- It's the most efficient way to build a project