17 Apr 2026

feedDjango community aggregator: Community blog posts

Django News - 30% Off PyCharm Pro – 100% for Django - Apr 17th 2026

Introduction

Django News Newsletter is moving!

Just a quick heads up. We're planning to move our newsletter to a new platform next week.

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Django Newsletter

News

PyCharm & Django annual fundraiser

JetBrains and the Django Software Foundation team up again to offer 30% off PyCharm while matching donations to fund Django's core development and community programs.

djangoproject.com

New Technical Governance - request for community feedback

Django proposes a simpler, more flexible technical governance model and is inviting community feedback ahead of a planned July 2026 rollout.

djangoproject.com

Could you host DjangoCon Europe 2027? Call for organizers

DjangoCon Europe 2026 is happening right now in Athens, Greece but plans for 2027 have already begun. This post lays out all the resources for any questions, support, and more for future organizers.

djangoproject.com

Reverting the incremental GC in Python 3.14 and 3.15 - Core Development

Python is rolling back its new incremental garbage collector in 3.14 and 3.15 after real-world memory issues, reverting to the proven generational model while rethinking a future reintroduction.

python.org

PEP 772: Packaging Council governance process (Round 3) - Packaging / Coordination

PEP 772 has officially been approved, creating a new Python Packaging Council to guide the future of packaging standards, tools, and ecosystem governance.

python.org

Django Software Foundation

Django Has Adopted Contributor Covenant 3

The 3.0 edition of the new Code of Conduct is here! This milestone represents the completion of a careful, community-driven process that began earlier this year.

djangoproject.com

DSF Board monthly meeting, April 9, 2026

The Django Software Foundation approved a modernized Code of Conduct, new working group charters, and key community initiatives, signaling a fresh push toward clearer governance and sustained project growth.

django.github.io

Python Software Foundation

PyCon US 2026: Why we're asking you to think about your hotel reservation

For many years, PyCon US has relied on hotel booking commissions to help pay for conference space. If you are attending this year, please use an official hotel to be both close to the venue.

pyfound.blogspot.com

Python Software Foundation News: Reflecting on Five Years as the PSF's First CPython Developer in Residence

Łukasz Langa looks back on five years and highlights including the transition to GitHub issues from bugs.python.org, the replacement of the mostly manual CLA process with an automated system, the introduction of free threading to Python, and the replacement of the interactive shell in the interpreter. Also while addressing thousands of bugs, he's witnessed the full-time paid developer in residence roster at the Python Software Foundation grow from one person to five.

pyfound.blogspot.com

Updates to Django

Today, "Updates to Django" is presented by Johanan Oppong Amoateng from Djangonaut Space! 🚀

Last week we had 12 pull requests merged into Django by 10 different contributors - including a first-time contributor! Congratulations to Jonathan Wu for having their first commits merged into Django - welcome on board!

This week's Django highlights: 🦄

Django Newsletter

Django Fellow Reports

Fellow Report - Natalia

A good chunk of this week focused on improving contributor workflows and reducing review overhead by introducing automated quality checks for PRs :robot:. This builds on prior experimentation (thanks @frankwiles) and seeks to provide early, actionable feedback for PR authors while helping maintainers focus on substantive review. We also had a flood of overly verbose and low quality reports from the same person, which I closed eagerly making use of the recent new guidelines we published in the security policy.

djangoproject.com

Fellow Report - Jacob

The last report before DjangoCon Europe. Lots of tickets triaged, reviewed, authored, discussed, and the usual kaleidoscope of miscellaneous tasks.

djangoproject.com

Django Fellow Report - Sarah

Django Fellow Sarah Boyce returns from maternity leave with part-time updates, tackling triage, reviews, security work, and GSoC prep while navigating connectivity challenges from Turkey.

djangoproject.com

Sponsored Link 1

You know @login_required. Now meet @app.reasoner(). AgentField turns Python functions into production AI agents, structured output, async execution, agent discovery. Every decorator becomes a REST endpoint. Open source, Apache 2.0. Python, Go & TypeScript SDKs.

agentfield.ai

Articles

Enforce Business Logic in the Database with Django

A practical guide to enforcing business logic at the database layer in Django using transactions, select_for_update locks, and CheckConstraint / UniqueConstraint to prevent race conditions and invalid data rather than relying on application-level validation.

lincolnloop.com

Let's talk about LLMs

James Bennett consolidates his thoughts on AI/LLMs in this wide-ranging piece, ending with a call to invest in software fundamentals instead of racing to adopt the latest AI craze.

b-list.org

Django Table, Filter and Export With Htmx

A reusable pattern for combining django-tables2, django-filter, and HTMX into a single generic view and template. Very cool stuff.

fundor333.com

Decoupling Your Business Logic from the Django ORM

Carlton Gibson's latest The Stack Report is a detailed dive into business logic and how to handle it in Django. This is a perennial topic, but he comes at it with decades of experience and wisdom.

buttondown.com

djust 0.4.0 - The Developer Experience Release

djust 0.4.0 is about developer experience - making everyday tasks faster, safer, and more intuitive. 30+ new features, critical bug fixes, and a security hardening pass that eliminated every known vulnerability.

djust.org

Why aren't we uv yet?

A decent chunk of new Python repos already use uv. Coding agents still overwhelmingly recommend pip and requirements.txt, while many users prefer uv.

aleyan.com

Events

Are You Attending PyCon, or Orbiting It?

PSF Board Member Georgi Ker makes a personal case for booking hotels via the official PyCon US website before April 24th.

georgiker.com

Design Articles

Under the hood of MDN's new frontend

From 2-min dev server starts to 2s. They rewrote MDN's entire frontend, ditching the React SPA for Lit web components, server components, and Rspack. The result: less JS shipped, scoped CSS, and a build pipeline that just works.

mozilla.org

Videos

Debunking Django Myths - Sarah Boyce at PyTV

Django Fellow Sarah Boyce gave a talk recently at PyTV titled, "Django Has a Marketing Problem: Debunking the Myths That Won't Die." It is a fantastic overview of what Django does well and what it can improve.

youtu.be

Incremental Typing in Django - Carlton Gibson

Former Django Fellow and current Django Chat podcast host Carlton Gibson, recently gave a talk titled, "Static Islands, Dynamic Sea: Some Thoughts on Incremental Typing." In it he talks about why Python's dynamic nature is a feature, not a bug, and demonstrates Mantle - a library of utilities for typing around Django's liquid core.

youtu.be

Sponsored Link 2

Annual PyCharm Promo - 30% off, all money goes to Django

The annual PyCharm + Django promotion is live until May 1st. This is the single biggest fundraiser for Django and has raised over $350,000 since 2016.

jetbrains.com

Podcasts

Django Tasks - Jake Howard

Episode 200(!) features Jake Howard, a Senior Systems Engineer at Torchbox and the author of DEP 14, django.tasks, the highlight feature in Django 6.0. We discuss his work on the Django security team, work with Wagtail, AI dabblings, and more.

djangochat.com

Django Job Board

Python Developer at Open Data Services

Remote UK role building Python data systems for social-impact projects, offering ~£48k plus profit share in a collaborative worker co-op.

djangojobboard.com

Projects

yassi/dj-signals-panel

Display registered Django signals and receivers, showing what fires and where.

github.com

dvf/opinionated-django

An opinionated Django project with Repository pattern, Pydantic DTOs, svcs DI, and Stripe-style ULID IDs

github.com


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17 Apr 2026 3:00pm GMT

Djangocon EU: body of knowledge - Daniele Procida

(One of my summaries of the 2026 Djangocon EU in Athens).

Athens! The thinking industry started here. Athens is often the origin if you follow ideas to the source.

Here also Socrates was found guilty (280-221) for "corrupting the youth" on trumped-up charges. Though... he made it is job to be a complete nuisance: exposing everyone's hypocrisy and asking difficult questions. After the 280-221 vote he got to give a speech in reaction. After that, the vote on the actual punishment was 360-141 in favour of the death penalty. The speech must have been particularly irritating.

On to a different subject. He watched the recent launch of the NASA rocket that went to the moon. A marvel of technology. That was measured using body parts, being 322 feet tall. And the distance to the moon in miles. Why not the scientific meter and kilometer?

Plato already mentioned it. "Now take the acquisition of knowledge; is the body a hindrance or not, if one takes it into partnership to share an investigation". And "when the soul tries to investigate anything with the help of the body, it is obviously led astray".

0.098 km = 98 m = 98000 mm, a child can understand it. Pure rationality. But ask a Metric Martyr in the UK how many feet are in a mile and most of them won't know.

The world seems to be divided in two camps:

  • Thinking, rationality, abstraction, unboundedness.
  • Bodies, materiality, tangibility, being rooted.

Wouldn't Plato have loved a computer? Pure rationality, following its logic programming without fail?

What about those body-part-units? They're not that weird actually. They're rational Roman measurements:

  • A mile is 1000 Roman paces.
  • 1 passus = 5 pedes (feet).
  • 1/12 pes (feet) = 1 uncia (thus: inch).

(Note: according to the Greek, Romans are only good for stealing Greek ideas, building roads and killing people.)

On to another aspect. Why is Django's documentation so good? Well, it has been prioritized from the start. It is complete, accurate, consistent, rational and well-structured: all Platonic values.

But Daniele also thinks the documentation is so good because it fits the human body.

The size has to be right. The limitations of our intelligence are the limits of our embodied intelligence. We can only grasp so much, mentally. A list can be too long. A page can be too long. If information is cut in too-small parts, you also can get into problems as you have to context-switch between pages too much. We tire mentally also because we tire physically.

The same applies to our body. Our hands and fingers can grasp objects. But it has to be of a certain size. Too big and we can't grasp it. Too small and our fingers can't pick it up.

We experience documentation in time and space. We move with it. How long have you been reading the Django documentation? "Where are you in the text?" We orient ourselves in text as if in a space or a building. We rely on the humanised rationality of structure. Sometimes you're in a building and it is clear where you have to go and in other buildings you feel lost.

Django's documentation is so good because of the quality of experience that it gives you. It is almost an embodied being that you can experience in space and time. Does it fit you? Do you notice it? The embodied nature of the work and intelligence that the Django community poured into the documentation?

Early Macintosh manuals had to explain new concepts and really tried to explain them in a human way. Scrolling being explained with help of an old book scroll, for instance. A floppy disk for storage as a floor plan of a building with a corridor and rooms.

Aldine Press (started 1494 in Venice) had a vision to print the old classics in a more accessible way. Books in the middle ages used to be big. And sometimes chained to the desk. Not really accessible. By printing them in smaller, lighter, more accessible formats, he wanted to make our "body of knowledge" more fitting to the human body.

You can see the bodily aspects of knowledge in our language:

  • Seizing/taking: grasp, comprehend, apprehend, perceive.
  • Measuring: ponder, weigh up, fathom.
  • Body movement: jumping to conclusions, intuitive leap, stumble/trip
  • Spatiality: understand, position

Mental space. When he asked a question of Russell Keith-Magee at a Django sprint, Russell would close his eyes and turn his eye inwards for a while. He would look at the Django codebase in his head and navigate it. Just like you yourself would navigate a city?

Being a programmer isn't so different from being a human with a body in time and space. Look at questions you might have as a beginning programmer:

  • Which file or directory or window to be in.
  • Where to expect the output.
  • When to expect it.
  • Where to enter a command.
  • When to do something.
  • In what order to do things.

And then look at an experienced programmer. They seem to know where they are. They know their way around. They can move smoothly.

Closing comment: there are some uncanny features in software nowadays. As a human, we are used to having limits. But nowadays we have infinite scrolling, doomscrolling. And edgeless, endless, virtual cloud resources. And LLM indeterminism. Those are not inherintly bad, but it is different from what we're used to. Is this still computing fit for the embodied mind?

https://reinout.vanrees.org/images/2026/kat1.jpeg

Unrelated photo explanation: a cat I encountered in Athens on an evening stroll in the neighbourhood behind the hotel.

17 Apr 2026 4:00am GMT

Djangocon EU: auto-prefetching with model field fetch modes in Django 6.1 - Jacob Walls

(One of my summaries of the 2026 Djangocon EU in Athens).

There's an example to experiment with here: https://dryorm.xterm.info/fetch-modes-simple

Timeline: it will be included in Django 6.1 in August.

The reason is the 1+n problem:

books = Book.objects.all()
for book in books:
    print(book.author.name)
    # This does a fresh query for author every time.

You can solve it with select_related(relation_names) or prefetch_related(relation_names). The first does an inner join. The second does two queries.

But: you might miss a relation. You might specify too many relations, getting data you don't need. Or you might not know about the relation as the code is in a totally different part of the code.

Fetch mode is intended to solve it. You can append .fetch_mode(models.FETCH_xyz) to your query:

  • models.FETCH_ONE: the current behaviour, which will be the default.
  • models.FETCH_PEERS: Fetch a deferred field for all instances that came from the same queryset. More or less prefetch_related in an automatic, lazy manner.
  • models.FETCH_RAISE: useful for development, it will raise FieldFetchBlocked. And it will thus tell you that you'll have a performance problem and that you might need FETCH_PEERS

This is what happens:

books = Book.objects.all().fetch_mode(models.FETCH_PEERS)
for book in books:
    # We're iterating over the query, so the query executes and grabs all books.
    print(book.author.name)
    # We accessed a relation, so at this point the prefetch_related-like
    # mechanism ist fired off and all authors linked to by the books are
    # grabbed in one single query.

You can write your own fetch modes, for instance if you only want a warning instead of raising an error.

https://reinout.vanrees.org/images/2026/kat3.jpeg

Unrelated photo explanation: a cat I encountered in Athens on an evening stroll in the neighbourhood behind the hotel.

17 Apr 2026 4:00am GMT