diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/api-guide/serializers.md | 8 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md | 2 |
2 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/docs/api-guide/serializers.md b/docs/api-guide/serializers.md index 137cc9d5..b9f0e7bc 100644 --- a/docs/api-guide/serializers.md +++ b/docs/api-guide/serializers.md @@ -22,11 +22,13 @@ The serializers in REST framework work very similarly to Django's `Form` and `Mo Let's start by creating a simple object we can use for example purposes: + from datetime import datetime + class Comment(object): def __init__(self, email, content, created=None): self.email = email self.content = content - self.created = created or datetime.datetime.now() + self.created = created or datetime.now() comment = Comment(email='leila@example.com', content='foo bar') @@ -61,10 +63,10 @@ At this point we've translated the model instance into Python native datatypes. Deserialization is similar. First we parse a stream into Python native datatypes... - from StringIO import StringIO + from django.utils.six import BytesIO from rest_framework.parsers import JSONParser - stream = StringIO(json) + stream = BytesIO(json) data = JSONParser().parse(stream) ...then we restore those native datatypes into a dictionary of validated data. diff --git a/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md b/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md index b1baf0dd..ff507a2b 100644 --- a/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md +++ b/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md @@ -161,8 +161,6 @@ At this point we've translated the model instance into Python native datatypes. Deserialization is similar. First we parse a stream into Python native datatypes... - # This import will use either `StringIO.StringIO` or `io.BytesIO` - # as appropriate, depending on if we're running Python 2 or Python 3. from django.utils.six import BytesIO stream = BytesIO(content) |
