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I Love Django

Now that I've been coding for quite a bit I've fallen rather in love with Django's simplicity and how segmented purposes are between templates.html v.s. urls.py v.s. views.py v.s. forms.py v.s. models.py ||| I really like how segregated the logic is, for other frameworks I imagine this is less so the case?

/r/django
https://redd.it/1pfdpun
How many people are building graphQL API using Django?

How many people are building graphQL API using Django?

/r/django
https://redd.it/1pfddsq
Built an open-source mock payment gateway in Python (no more Stripe test limits)

What My Project Does

AcquireMock is a self-hosted payment processor for testing and development. It simulates a real payment gateway with:

Payment page generation with card forms (accepts test card 4444 4444 4444 4444)
OTP email verification flow
Webhook delivery with HMAC signatures and retry logic
Saved payment methods for returning customers
Production-ready features: CSRF protection, rate limiting, request validation

Tech stack: FastAPI + PostgreSQL + SQLAlchemy + Pydantic. Frontend is vanilla JS to keep it lightweight.

Target Audience

This is meant for:

Developers building payment integrations who hit Stripe test mode limits
Teaching/learning how payment flows work (OTP, webhooks, 3DS simulation)
Offline development environments where external APIs aren't accessible
Projects that need a mock payment system without external dependencies

Not intended for production use - it's a testing/development tool.

Comparison

Unlike Stripe's official test mode:

Runs completely offline (no API keys, no internet required)
No rate limits or request caps
Full control over webhook timing and retry logic
Can be customized for specific testing scenarios
Works without any external service configuration

Compared to other mock payment tools, this one includes a full UI (not just API endpoints), supports multi-language, has email OTP flow, and comes with Docker Compose for instant setup.

GitHub: https://github.com/illusiOxd/acquiremock

Open to feedback, especially on the

/r/Python
https://redd.it/1pfl8ln
Does having a back in an engineering degree really cause problems for my future career?

Hey everyone,
Current engineering student here, looking for some real-world perspective.
How much does having a "back" (a failed subject needing a re-take) truly impact job prospects or grad school admissions? I'm hearing mixed messages that it's a huge red flag.
Seeking insight:
-For first jobs: Does a back matter less than the final CGPA/GPA?
-Offsetting: What's the best way to compensate (internships, projects, etc.)?
-Your experience: Did you have a back and still land a great job?
Any honest advice is welcome. Thanks!

/r/django
https://redd.it/1pfgo7f