25:47 And then there's a I have a, like, a Docker Compose file that is on my GitHub that I can share with you, and that will run Postgres and Redis. And then you can Yes. Your your Django app to to run against those.
00:00 Today on Python test, I have asked Cory Zhu to be on the show, and, I'm excite I'm super excited, actually. I'm, like, totally stoked because, Corey has done he's a Django, like, guru and has done a project called SaaS Pegasus. Hopefully I'm hoping that SASPegasus will help me get a SAS project off the ground. So, we're gonna talk some Django. Thank you, Corey, for being on the show.
35:45 Like, tail end is, like, you should never have a class for, like, a card or, you know, a button, And instead, you should have, like, 20 classes that say, like, prime text color red, you know, margin 2 REMS, padding this much, shadow this much. So, like like, literally, like, a button in tail end will often have, like, these, like, you know, I'm not even exaggerating, maybe, like, 20 class names, which sounds crazy and and is often very jarring for people who who start development. It is somewhat mitigated by a library called Daisy UI, which Pegasus uses, which Daisy UI is kind of like a bridge between tailwind and bootstrap. And so Daisy UI will actually provide a button class and, like, a primary button and a error button and whatever. And behind the scenes, it it just maps that to, like, you know, the 20 tailwind classes that you would want.