rewrite class-based view docs

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@ -1,235 +1,319 @@
Pluggable Views Class-based Views
=============== =================
.. versionadded:: 0.7 .. currentmodule:: flask.views
Flask 0.7 introduces pluggable views inspired by the generic views from This page introduces using the :class:`View` and :class:`MethodView`
Django which are based on classes instead of functions. The main classes to write class-based views.
intention is that you can replace parts of the implementations and this
way have customizable pluggable views.
Basic Principle A class-based view is a class that acts as a view function. Because it
--------------- is a class, different instances of the class can be created with
different arguments, to change the behavior of the view. This is also
known as generic, reusable, or pluggable views.
Consider you have a function that loads a list of objects from the An example of where this is useful is defining a class that creates an
database and renders into a template:: API based on the database model it is initialized with.
@app.route('/users/') For more complex API behavior and customization, look into the various
def show_users(page): API extensions for Flask.
Basic Reusable View
-------------------
Let's walk through an example converting a view function to a view
class. We start with a view function that queries a list of users then
renders a template to show the list.
.. code-block:: python
@app.route("/users/")
def user_list():
users = User.query.all() users = User.query.all()
return render_template('users.html', users=users) return render_template("users.html", users=users)
This is simple and flexible, but if you want to provide this view in a This works for the user model, but let's say you also had more models
generic fashion that can be adapted to other models and templates as well that needed list pages. You'd need to write another view function for
you might want more flexibility. This is where pluggable class-based each model, even though the only thing that would change is the model
views come into place. As the first step to convert this into a class and template name.
based view you would do this::
Instead, you can write a :class:`View` subclass that will query a model
and render a template. As the first step, we'll convert the view to a
class without any customization.
.. code-block:: python
from flask.views import View from flask.views import View
class ShowUsers(View): class UserList(View):
def dispatch_request(self): def dispatch_request(self):
users = User.query.all() users = User.query.all()
return render_template('users.html', objects=users) return render_template("users.html", objects=users)
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=ShowUsers.as_view('show_users')) app.add_url_rule("/users/", view_func=UserList.as_view("user_list"))
As you can see what you have to do is to create a subclass of The :meth:`View.dispatch_request` method is the equivalent of the view
:class:`flask.views.View` and implement function. Calling :meth:`View.as_view` method will create a view
:meth:`~flask.views.View.dispatch_request`. Then we have to convert that function that can be registered on the app with its
class into an actual view function by using the :meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` method. The first argument to
:meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` class method. The string you pass to ``as_view`` is the name to use to refer to the view with
that function is the name of the endpoint that view will then have. But :func:`~flask.url_for`.
this by itself is not helpful, so let's refactor the code a bit::
.. note::
from flask.views import View You can't decorate the class with ``@app.route()`` the way you'd
do with a basic view function.
Next, we need to be able to register the same view class for different
models and templates, to make it more useful than the original function.
The class will take two arguments, the model and template, and store
them on ``self``. Then ``dispatch_request`` can reference these instead
of hard-coded values.
.. code-block:: python
class ListView(View): class ListView(View):
def __init__(self, model, template):
def get_template_name(self): self.model = model
raise NotImplementedError() self.template = template
def render_template(self, context):
return render_template(self.get_template_name(), **context)
def dispatch_request(self): def dispatch_request(self):
context = {'objects': self.get_objects()} items = self.model.query.all()
return self.render_template(context) return render_template(self.template, items=items)
class UserView(ListView): Remember, we create the view function with ``View.as_view()`` instead of
creating the class directly. Any extra arguments passed to ``as_view``
are then passed when creating the class. Now we can register the same
view to handle multiple models.
def get_template_name(self): .. code-block:: python
return 'users.html'
def get_objects(self): app.add_url_rule(
return User.query.all() "/users/",
view_func=ListView.as_view("user_list", User, "users.html"),
)
app.add_url_rule(
"/stories/",
view_func=ListView.as_view("story_list", Story, "stories.html"),
)
This of course is not that helpful for such a small example, but it's good
enough to explain the basic principle. When you have a class-based view
the question comes up what ``self`` points to. The way this works is that
whenever the request is dispatched a new instance of the class is created
and the :meth:`~flask.views.View.dispatch_request` method is called with
the parameters from the URL rule. The class itself is instantiated with
the parameters passed to the :meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` function.
For instance you can write a class like this::
class RenderTemplateView(View): URL Variables
def __init__(self, template_name): -------------
self.template_name = template_name
Any variables captured by the URL are passed as keyword arguments to the
``dispatch_request`` method, as they would be for a regular view
function.
.. code-block:: python
class DetailView(View):
def __init__(self, model):
self.model = model
self.template = f"{model.__name__.lower()}/detail.html"
def dispatch_request(self, id)
item = self.model.query.get_or_404(id)
return render_template(self.template, item=item)
app.add_url_rule("/users/<int:id>", view_func=DetailView.as_view("user_detail"))
View Lifetime and ``self``
--------------------------
By default, a new instance of the view class is created every time a
request is handled. This means that it is safe to write other data to
``self`` during the request, since the next request will not see it,
unlike other forms of global state.
However, if your view class needs to do a lot of complex initialization,
doing it for every request is unnecessary and can be inefficient. To
avoid this, set :attr:`View.init_every_request` to ``False``, which will
only create one instance of the class and use it for every request. In
this case, writing to ``self`` is not safe. If you need to store data
during the request, use :data:`~flask.g` instead.
In the ``ListView`` example, nothing writes to ``self`` during the
request, so it is more efficient to create a single instance.
.. code-block:: python
class ListView(View):
init_every_request = False
def __init__(self, model, template):
self.model = model
self.template = template
def dispatch_request(self): def dispatch_request(self):
return render_template(self.template_name) items = self.model.query.all()
return render_template(self.template, items=items)
And then you can register it like this:: Different instances will still be created each for each ``as_view``
call, but not for each request to those views.
View Decorators
---------------
The view class itself is not the view function. View decorators need to
be applied to the view function returned by ``as_view``, not the class
itself. Set :attr:`View.decorators` to a list of decorators to apply.
.. code-block:: python
class UserList(View):
decorators = [cache(minutes=2), login_required]
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=UserList.as_view())
If you didn't set ``decorators``, you could apply them manually instead.
This is equivalent to:
.. code-block:: python
view = UserList.as_view("users_list")
view = cache(minutes=2)(view)
view = login_required(view)
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=view)
Keep in mind that order matters. If you're used to ``@decorator`` style,
this is equivalent to:
.. code-block:: python
@app.route("/users/")
@login_required
@cache(minutes=2)
def user_list():
...
app.add_url_rule('/about', view_func=RenderTemplateView.as_view(
'about_page', template_name='about.html'))
Method Hints Method Hints
------------ ------------
Pluggable views are attached to the application like a regular function by A common pattern is to register a view with ``methods=["GET", "POST"]``,
either using :func:`~flask.Flask.route` or better then check ``request.method == "POST"`` to decide what to do. Setting
:meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule`. That however also means that you would :attr:`View.methods` is equivalent to passing the list of methods to
have to provide the names of the HTTP methods the view supports when you ``add_url_rule`` or ``route``.
attach this. In order to move that information to the class you can
provide a :attr:`~flask.views.View.methods` attribute that has this .. code-block:: python
information::
class MyView(View): class MyView(View):
methods = ['GET', 'POST'] methods = ["GET", "POST"]
def dispatch_request(self): def dispatch_request(self):
if request.method == 'POST': if request.method == "POST":
... ...
... ...
app.add_url_rule('/myview', view_func=MyView.as_view('myview')) app.add_url_rule('/my-view', view_func=MyView.as_view('my-view'))
Method Based Dispatching This is equivalent to the following, except further subclasses can
------------------------ inherit or change the methods.
For RESTful APIs it's especially helpful to execute a different function .. code-block:: python
for each HTTP method. With the :class:`flask.views.MethodView` you can
easily do that. Each HTTP method maps to a method of the class with the app.add_url_rule(
same name (just in lowercase):: "/my-view",
view_func=MyView.as_view("my-view"),
methods=["GET", "POST"],
)
Method Dispatching and APIs
---------------------------
For APIs it can be helpful to use a different function for each HTTP
method. :class:`MethodView` extends the basic :class:`View` to dispatch
to different methods of the class based on the request method. Each HTTP
method maps to a method of the class with the same (lowercase) name.
:class:`MethodView` automatically sets :attr:`View.methods` based on the
methods defined by the class. It even knows how to handle subclasses
that override or define other methods.
We can make a generic ``ItemAPI`` class that provides get (detail),
patch (edit), and delete methods for a given model. A ``GroupAPI`` can
provide get (list) and post (create) methods.
.. code-block:: python
from flask.views import MethodView from flask.views import MethodView
class UserAPI(MethodView): class ItemAPI(MethodView):
init_every_request = False
def __init__(self, model):
self.model
self.validator = generate_validator(model)
def _get_item(self, id):
return self.model.query.get_or_404(id)
def get(self, id):
user = self._get_item(id)
return jsonify(item.to_json())
def patch(self, id):
item = self._get_item(id)
errors = self.validator.validate(item, request.json)
if errors:
return jsonify(errors), 400
item.update_from_json(request.json)
db.session.commit()
return jsonify(item.to_json())
def delete(self, id):
item = self._get_item(id)
db.session.delete(item)
db.session.commit()
return "", 204
class GroupAPI(MethodView):
init_every_request = False
def __init__(self, model):
self.model = model
self.validator = generate_validator(model, create=True)
def get(self): def get(self):
users = User.query.all() items = self.model.query.all()
... return jsonify([item.to_json() for item in items])
def post(self): def post(self):
user = User.from_form_data(request.form) errors = self.validator.validate(request.json)
...
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=UserAPI.as_view('users')) if errors:
return jsonify(errors), 400
That way you also don't have to provide the db.session.add(self.model.from_json(request.json))
:attr:`~flask.views.View.methods` attribute. It's automatically set based db.session.commit()
on the methods defined in the class. return jsonify(item.to_json())
Decorating Views def register_api(app, model, url):
---------------- app.add_url_rule(f"/{name}/<int:id>", view_func=ItemAPI(f"{name}-item", model))
app.add_url_rule(f"/{name}/", view_func=GroupAPI(f"{name}-group", model))
Since the view class itself is not the view function that is added to the register_api(app, User, "users")
routing system it does not make much sense to decorate the class itself. register_api(app, Story, "stories")
Instead you either have to decorate the return value of
:meth:`~flask.views.View.as_view` by hand::
def user_required(f): This produces the following views, a standard REST API!
"""Checks whether user is logged in or raises error 401."""
def decorator(*args, **kwargs):
if not g.user:
abort(401)
return f(*args, **kwargs)
return decorator
view = user_required(UserAPI.as_view('users')) ================= ========== ===================
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=view) URL Method Description
----------------- ---------- -------------------
Starting with Flask 0.8 there is also an alternative way where you can ``/users/`` ``GET`` List all users
specify a list of decorators to apply in the class declaration:: ``/users/`` ``POST`` Create a new user
``/users/<id>`` ``GET`` Show a single user
class UserAPI(MethodView): ``/users/<id>`` ``PATCH`` Update a user
decorators = [user_required] ``/users/<id>`` ``DELETE`` Delete a user
``/stories/`` ``GET`` List all stories
Due to the implicit self from the caller's perspective you cannot use ``/stories/`` ``POST`` Create a new story
regular view decorators on the individual methods of the view however, ``/stories/<id>`` ``GET`` Show a single story
keep this in mind. ``/stories/<id>`` ``PATCH`` Update a story
``/stories/<id>`` ``DELETE`` Delete a story
Method Views for APIs ================= ========== ===================
---------------------
Web APIs are often working very closely with HTTP verbs so it makes a lot
of sense to implement such an API based on the
:class:`~flask.views.MethodView`. That said, you will notice that the API
will require different URL rules that go to the same method view most of
the time. For instance consider that you are exposing a user object on
the web:
=============== =============== ======================================
URL Method Description
--------------- --------------- --------------------------------------
``/users/`` ``GET`` Gives a list of all users
``/users/`` ``POST`` Creates a new user
``/users/<id>`` ``GET`` Shows a single user
``/users/<id>`` ``PUT`` Updates a single user
``/users/<id>`` ``DELETE`` Deletes a single user
=============== =============== ======================================
So how would you go about doing that with the
:class:`~flask.views.MethodView`? The trick is to take advantage of the
fact that you can provide multiple rules to the same view.
Let's assume for the moment the view would look like this::
class UserAPI(MethodView):
def get(self, user_id):
if user_id is None:
# return a list of users
pass
else:
# expose a single user
pass
def post(self):
# create a new user
pass
def delete(self, user_id):
# delete a single user
pass
def put(self, user_id):
# update a single user
pass
So how do we hook this up with the routing system? By adding two rules
and explicitly mentioning the methods for each::
user_view = UserAPI.as_view('user_api')
app.add_url_rule('/users/', defaults={'user_id': None},
view_func=user_view, methods=['GET',])
app.add_url_rule('/users/', view_func=user_view, methods=['POST',])
app.add_url_rule('/users/<int:user_id>', view_func=user_view,
methods=['GET', 'PUT', 'DELETE'])
If you have a lot of APIs that look similar you can refactor that
registration code::
def register_api(view, endpoint, url, pk='id', pk_type='int'):
view_func = view.as_view(endpoint)
app.add_url_rule(url, defaults={pk: None},
view_func=view_func, methods=['GET',])
app.add_url_rule(url, view_func=view_func, methods=['POST',])
app.add_url_rule(f'{url}<{pk_type}:{pk}>', view_func=view_func,
methods=['GET', 'PUT', 'DELETE'])
register_api(UserAPI, 'user_api', '/users/', pk='user_id')

View file

@ -11,53 +11,54 @@ http_method_funcs = frozenset(
class View: class View:
"""Alternative way to use view functions. A subclass has to implement """Subclass this class and override :meth:`dispatch_request` to
:meth:`dispatch_request` which is called with the view arguments from create a generic class-based view. Call :meth:`as_view` to create a
the URL routing system. If :attr:`methods` is provided the methods view function that creates an instance of the class with the given
do not have to be passed to the :meth:`~flask.Flask.add_url_rule` arguments and calls its ``dispatch_request`` method with any URL
method explicitly:: variables.
class MyView(View): See :doc:`views` for a detailed guide.
methods = ['GET']
.. code-block:: python
class Hello(View):
init_every_request = False
def dispatch_request(self, name): def dispatch_request(self, name):
return f"Hello {name}!" return f"Hello, {name}!"
app.add_url_rule('/hello/<name>', view_func=MyView.as_view('myview')) app.add_url_rule(
"/hello/<name>", view_func=Hello.as_view("hello")
)
When you want to decorate a pluggable view you will have to either do that Set :attr:`methods` on the class to change what methods the view
when the view function is created (by wrapping the return value of accepts.
:meth:`as_view`) or you can use the :attr:`decorators` attribute::
class SecretView(View): Set :attr:`decorators` on the class to apply a list of decorators to
methods = ['GET'] the generated view function. Decorators applied to the class itself
decorators = [superuser_required] will not be applied to the generated view function!
def dispatch_request(self): Set :attr:`init_every_request` to ``False`` for efficiency, unless
... you need to store request-global data on ``self``.
The decorators stored in the decorators list are applied one after another
when the view function is created. Note that you can *not* use the class
based decorators since those would decorate the view class and not the
generated view function!
""" """
#: A list of methods this view can handle. #: The methods this view is registered for. Uses the same default
methods: t.Optional[t.List[str]] = None #: (``["GET", "HEAD", "OPTIONS"]``) as ``route`` and
#: ``add_url_rule`` by default.
methods: t.ClassVar[t.Optional[t.List[str]]] = None
#: Setting this disables or force-enables the automatic options handling. #: Control whether the ``OPTIONS`` method is handled automatically.
provide_automatic_options: t.Optional[bool] = None #: Uses the same default (``True``) as ``route`` and
#: ``add_url_rule`` by default.
provide_automatic_options: t.ClassVar[t.Optional[bool]] = None
#: The canonical way to decorate class-based views is to decorate the #: A list of decorators to apply, in order, to the generated view
#: return value of as_view(). However since this moves parts of the #: function. Remember that ``@decorator`` syntax is applied bottom
#: logic from the class declaration to the place where it's hooked #: to top, so the first decorator in the list would be the bottom
#: into the routing system. #: decorator.
#:
#: You can place one or more decorators in this list and whenever the
#: view function is created the result is automatically decorated.
#: #:
#: .. versionadded:: 0.8 #: .. versionadded:: 0.8
decorators: t.List[t.Callable] = [] decorators: t.ClassVar[t.List[t.Callable]] = []
#: Create a new instance of this view class for every request by #: Create a new instance of this view class for every request by
#: default. If a view subclass sets this to ``False``, the same #: default. If a view subclass sets this to ``False``, the same
@ -72,9 +73,9 @@ class View:
init_every_request: t.ClassVar[bool] = True init_every_request: t.ClassVar[bool] = True
def dispatch_request(self) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue: def dispatch_request(self) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue:
"""Subclasses have to override this method to implement the """The actual view function behavior. Subclasses must override
actual view function code. This method is called with all this and return a valid response. Any variables from the URL
the arguments from the URL rule. rule are passed as keyword arguments.
""" """
raise NotImplementedError() raise NotImplementedError()
@ -159,19 +160,30 @@ class MethodViewType(type):
class MethodView(View, metaclass=MethodViewType): class MethodView(View, metaclass=MethodViewType):
"""A class-based view that dispatches request methods to the corresponding """Dispatches request methods to the corresponding instance methods.
class methods. For example, if you implement a ``get`` method, it will be For example, if you implement a ``get`` method, it will be used to
used to handle ``GET`` requests. :: handle ``GET`` requests.
This can be useful for defining a REST API.
:attr:`methods` is automatically set based on the methods defined on
the class.
See :doc:`views` for a detailed guide.
.. code-block:: python
class CounterAPI(MethodView): class CounterAPI(MethodView):
def get(self): def get(self):
return session.get('counter', 0) return str(session.get("counter", 0))
def post(self): def post(self):
session['counter'] = session.get('counter', 0) + 1 session["counter"] = session.get("counter", 0) + 1
return 'OK' return redirect(url_for("counter"))
app.add_url_rule('/counter', view_func=CounterAPI.as_view('counter')) app.add_url_rule(
"/counter", view_func=CounterAPI.as_view("counter")
)
""" """
def dispatch_request(self, **kwargs: t.Any) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue: def dispatch_request(self, **kwargs: t.Any) -> ft.ResponseReturnValue: