Flask — — URL Building
The url_for() function is very useful for dynamically building a URL for a specific function. The function accepts the name of a function as first argument, and one or more keyword arguments, each corresponding to the variable part of URL.
The following script demonstrates use of url_for() function.
from flask import Flask, redirect, url_for
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/admin')
def hello_admin():
return 'Hello Admin'
@app.route('/guest/<guest>')
def hello_guest(guest):
return 'Hello %s as Guest' % guest
@app.route('/user/<name>')
def hello_user(name):
if name =='admin':
return redirect(url_for('hello_admin'))
else:
return redirect(url_for('hello_guest',guest = name))
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(debug = True)
The above script has a function user(name) which accepts a value to its argument from the URL.
The User() function checks if an argument received matches ‘admin’ or not. If it matches, the application is redirected to the hello_admin() function using url_for(), otherwise to the hello_guest() function passing the received argument as guest parameter to it.
Save the above code and run from Python shell.
Open the browser and enter URL as − http://localhost:5000/user/admin
The application response in browser is −
Hello Admin
Enter the following URL in the browser − http://localhost:5000/user/pl
The application response now changes to −
Hello pl as Guest