I am trying to create a very simple one-page Flask application for a python script that I have. The script requires multiple user inputs in a for-loop with the number of loops being user input as well.
Here is the code in my script to make it more clear:
def shared_books():
import requests as re
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import time
num_lists = int(input('Enter the number of lists you would like to search:'))
urls = []
page_counts = []
for i in range(num_lists):
urls.append(input(f'Enter the url for list {i + 1}:'))
page_counts.append(int(input(f'Enter the number of pages for list {i + 1}:')))
I want a simple HTML that will ask the user for the number of lists, then the URL and page count for each list as is shown in my function. Then it will run the entire function.
The HTML code I have right now is super simple and I don't want much else outside of the input parts:
<html>
<head>
<title>Goodreads-App</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to my app!</h1>
<<p>This app will allow you to see books that are
shared between multiple lists on goodreads</p>
</body>
</html>
Please let me know how I can set up this application!
Firstly, I suggest you take a look at the Flask docs. You are doing it right in terms of having a view function, but the input() python keyword doesn't work like that in Flask. Instead, you should render an html template which you can then put your form input field into. Here is an example:
from flask import Flask, render_template
#flask initialising stuff, read docs for info
#app.route("/home")
def home():
return render_template("home.html")
Flask runs on your computer's local server "localhost", which is not publicly accessible. It conventionally runs on port 5000, which gives the name "localhost:5000".
When someone visits "localhost:5000/home", flask will look for a file called "home.html" in a pre-designated templates folder – the default is a directory called "templates" which you should put your html files into.
So if this is your "home.html" file:
<html>
<head>
<title>Goodreads-App</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to my app!</h1>
<p>This app will allow you to see books that are
shared between multiple lists on goodreads</p>
</body>
</html>
When you load the page associated with a specific function, it will return a template which is rendered as html. The above should look something like this:
And that is how to start.
Thank you for the answers! I haven't quite solved the previous issue but have approached it from a different angle which is working now! I will potentially post again if I don't solve it.
I am using flask forms to do what I was trying.
I want to design my own HTML template with tags like JSP or Jade and then pass data from python to it and let it generate full html page.
I don't want to construct document at python side like with DOM. Only data goes to page and page tempalte decides, how data lays out.
I don't want to serve resulting pages with HTTP, only generate HTML files.
Is it possible?
UPDATE
I found Jinja2, but I has strange boilerplate requirements. For example, they want me to create environment with
env = Environment(
loader=PackageLoader('yourapplication', 'templates'),
autoescape=select_autoescape(['html', 'xml'])
)
while saying that package yourapplication not found. If I remove loader parameter, it complains on line
template = env.get_template('mytemplate.html')
saying
no loader for this environment specified
Can I just read template from disk and populate it with variables, without extra things?
Just use the FileSystemLoader:
import os
import glob
from jinja2 import Environment, FileSystemLoader
# Create the jinja2 environment.
current_directory = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
env = Environment(loader=FileSystemLoader(current_directory))
# Find all files with the j2 extension in the current directory
templates = glob.glob('*.j2')
def render_template(filename):
return env.get_template(filename).render(
foo='Hello',
bar='World'
)
for f in templates:
rendered_string = render_template(f)
print(rendered_string)
example.j2:
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<p><i>{{ foo }}</i></p>
<p><b>{{ bar }}</b></p>
</body>
</html>
I'm looking to use Flask to host a single-page website that would allow users to upload a CSV that would be parsed and put into a database. All of the database shenanigans are complete (through SQLalchemy in another Python script) and I've got everything worked out once a script has access to the CSV, I just need help getting it there.
Here's the scenario:
1. User directs browser at URL (probably something like
http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/upload/)
2. User chooses CSV to upload
3. User presses upload
4. File is uploaded and processed, but user is sent to a thank you page while our
script is still working on the CSV (so that their disconnect doesn't cause the
script to abort).
It's totally cool if the CSV is left on the server (in fact, it's probably preferred since we'd have a backup in case processing went awry)
I think what I want is a daemon that listens on a socket, but I'm not really experienced with this and don't know where to start getting it configured or setting up Flask.
If you think some framework other than Flask would be easier, definitely let me know, I'm not tied to Flask, I've just read that it's pretty easy to set up!
Thank you very much!!
Here is a (very slightly simplified) example of handling file uploading in web.py based on a cook book example (the Flash example, which I have less experience with, looks even easier):
import web
urls = ('/', 'Upload')
class Upload:
def GET(self):
web.header("Content-Type","text/html; charset=utf-8")
return """
<form method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data" action="">
<input type="file" name="myfile" />
<br/>
<input type="submit" />
"""
def POST(self):
x = web.input(myfile={})
filedir = '/uploads' # change this to the directory you want to store the file in.
if 'myfile' in x: # to check if the file-object is created
filepath=x.myfile.filename.replace('\\','/') # replaces the windows-style slashes with linux ones.
filename=filepath.split('/')[-1] # splits the and chooses the last part (the filename with extension)
fout = open(filedir +'/'+ filename,'wb') # creates the file where the uploaded file should be stored
fout.write(x.myfile.file.read()) # writes the uploaded file to the newly created file.
fout.close() # closes the file, upload complete.
raise web.seeother('/')
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = web.application(urls, globals())
app.run()
This renders a upload form, and then (on POST) reads the uploaded file and saves it to a designated path.
I really searched about 50 related pages but never seen a problem similar to my problem. When I press the submit button, it calls the script but the script returns an empty page and I see no file was uploaded. There is no typing error in my codes, I checked it several times and I really need this code running for my project. What might be the problem? I am running apache under ubuntu and my codes are:
html code:
<html><body>
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" action="save_file.py" method="post">
<p>File: <input type="file" name="file"></p>
<p><input type="submit" value="Upload"></p>
</form>
</body></html>
python code:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import cgi, os
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
try: #windows needs stdio set for binary mode
import msvcrt
msvcrt.setmode (0, os.O_BINARY)
msvcrt.setmode (1, os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
pass
form = cgi.FieldStorage()
#nested FieldStorage instance holds the file
fileitem = form['file']
#if file is uploaded
if fileitem.filename:
#strip leading path from filename to avoid directory based attacks
fn = os.path.basename(fileitem.filename)
open('/files' + fn, 'wb').write(fileitem.file.read())
message = 'The file "' + fn + '" was uploaded successfully'
else:
message = 'No file was uploaded'
print """\
Content-Type: text/html\n
<html><body>
<p>%s</p>
</body></html>
""" % (message,)
I just tested your script, with a few small corrections to the paths to make it work for me locally. With the paths set correctly, and permissions set properly, this code does work fine.
Here are the things to make sure of:
In your html file's form properties, make sure you are pointing to the python script that lives in a cgi-bin: action="/cgi-bin/save_file.py". For me, I have a cgi-bin at the root of my web server, and I placed the python script there. It will not work if you are running the script from a standard document location on the web server
Make sure your save_file.py has executable permissions: chmod 755 save_file.py
In your save_file.py, ensure that you are building a valid path to open the file for saving. I made mine absolute just for testing purposes, but something like this: open(os.path.join('/path/to/upload/files', fn)
With those points set correctly, you should not have any problems.
I am a behavorial scientist and usually collect data by letting participants do some tasks on a computer and record their responses (I write the programs using the pyglet wrapper PsychoPy). That is, the program runs locally and the data is stored locally.
Now I would like to know if there is a way to use Python to display a (local) website with html-forms to the user and collect the input (locally). The reason for this idea is that currently whenever I want to display checkboxes, radiobuttons, or input fields I use wxPython. This works quite well, but programming and layouting in wxPython is kind of cumbersome and I would prefer html with forms.
A requirement would be that it would need to rum without any borders, adress field, menu bar, ... The reason is that I need it in kind of fullscreen mode (I currently open a non-fullscreen pygflet window in the size of the screen to hide the desktop) so that participants can do nothing but work on the forms.
So I am looking for a way to (a) display html websites including html form above a pyglet window with no menu bar or whatsoever, (b) collect the input when clicking on the Ok button (i.e., the form is send), (c) control what is presented prior and after viewing this website, and (d) everything of this should happen locally!
My idea would be that the data is collected when participants hit the "Send away" button in the following example pic and the next page is displayed.
Update: I use windows (XP or 7).
This is a solution using Qt Webkit for rendering HTML. The default navigation request handler is wrapped by a function that checks for submitted form requests. The form uses the "get" method, so the data is included in the url of the request and can be retrieved that way. The original request is declined and you can change the content of the displayed web page as you wish.
from PyQt4 import QtGui, QtWebKit
app = QtGui.QApplication([])
view = QtWebKit.QWebView()
# intercept form submits
class MyWebPage(QtWebKit.QWebPage):
def acceptNavigationRequest(self, frame, req, nav_type):
if nav_type == QtWebKit.QWebPage.NavigationTypeFormSubmitted:
text = "<br/>\n".join(["%s: %s" % pair for pair in req.url().queryItems()])
view.setHtml(text)
return False
else:
return super(MyWebPage, self).acceptNavigationRequest(frame, req, nav_type)
view.setPage(MyWebPage())
# setup the html form
html = """
<form action="" method="get">
Like it?
<input type="radio" name="like" value="yes"/> Yes
<input type="radio" name="like" value="no" /> No
<br/><input type="text" name="text" value="Hello" />
<input type="submit" name="submit" value="Send"/>
</form>
"""
view.setHtml(html)
# run the application
view.show()
app.exec_()
As AdamKG mentioned, using a webframework would be a good choice. Since Django and similar might be an overkill here, using a micro webframework like 'flask' or 'bottle' would be a great choice.
This link demonstrates via step by step instruction how to make a simple form via a To-DO application. It assumes zero previous knowledge.
You can run it only locally also.
your want a simple solution, so just write a http server and run your simple page.
using python.BaseHTTPServer, coding a 15 line web server:
import BaseHTTPServer
class WebRequestHandler(BaseHTTPServer.BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_GET(self):
if self.path == '/foo':
self.send_response(200)
self.do_something()
else:
self.send_error(404)
def do_something(self):
print 'hello world'
server = BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer(('',80), WebRequestHandler)
server.serve_forever()
easy enough,but i suggest using some web frameworks. They are easy too.
for example, web.py. here is what u want in 50 line codes:
install web.py
make a dir with 2 files:
./
|-- app.py
`-- templates
`-- index.html
index.html
$def with (form, ret)
<html>
<head>
<title> another site </title>
</head>
<body>
<h1> hello, this is a web.py page </h1>
<form action="" method="post">
$:form.render()
</form>
<h2>$:ret</h2>
</body>
</html>
app.py logic file:
import web
### Url mappings
urls = (
'/', 'Index', )
### Templates
render = web.template.render('templates')
class Index:
form = web.form.Form(
web.form.Textbox('fav_name', web.form.notnull, description="Favorite Name:"),
web.form.Textbox('cur_name', web.form.notnull, description="Current Name:"),
web.form.Button('Send Away'),
)
def GET(self):
""" Show page """
form = self.form()
return render.index(form, "")
def POST(self):
""" handle button clicked """
form = self.form()
if not form.validates():
return render.index(form, "INPUT ERROR")
# save data by ur method, or do some task
#pyglet.save_data(form.d.fav_name, form.d.cur_name)
#pyglet.draw(some_pic)
#os.system(some_cmd)
form = self.form()
return render.index(form, "YOUR DATA SAVED")
app = web.application(urls, globals())
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
run this server in your windows:
python app.py 9999
open browser: http://127.0.0.1:9999/
by the way, if ur data is only strings, u can save them in web.by by sqlite.
My suggestion would be:
Use some python server as, for example SimpleHTTPServer. It is needed because the submit button on forms sends the information to a server. There you should manage the received info some way;
Have your browser configured with one of those Kiosk extensions, which disallow even the use of Alt+F4. An example would be Open Kiosk extension for Firefox
Optionally, if you have affinity with scripts in general, you could create a script which, when executed, would at the same time run the python server AND open your html file in the browser. That would ease a lot your setup work for every subject in your group.
EDIT: I've read you need the pyglet over the browser window. That could be included in the script of step 3, using "always on top" option and absolute positioning of the pyglet (I can tell this would probably be simpler on Linux, which could be run from persistent LiveUSB - just a thought!)
EDIT (regarding the posted comment):
I think the most reliable option for output would be to disk (file or database) instead or RAM (running python object), then you read the info from file afterwards. Then, in case of a surprise (system hang, power failure), the already-entered data would be there.
The only (and most important) part I don't know HOW to do is to handle the content of the form's "submit" on the server-side. Probably some server-side script file (php, python) shoud be created and left on the server root, so the server would receive an http request containing the info, and send the info to the script, which then handles the processing and file/database storage activities.
This might be of your interest:
"The POST request method is used when the client needs to send data to the server as part of the request, such as when uploading a file or submitting a completed form." (from wikipedia on "POST(HTTP)" ENTRY)
In another link, some thoughts on using SimpleHTTPServer itself for handling POST requests:
http://islascruz.org/html/index.php/blog/show/Python%3A-Simple-HTTP-Server-on-python..html
Hope this helps.
The reason for this idea is that currently whenever I want to display
checkboxes, radiobuttons, or input fields I use wxPython. This works
quite well, but programming and layouting in wxPython is kind of
cumbersome and I would prefer html with forms.
You can combine the ease of HTML and still create native Windows applications using Flex with a Python backend.
If you are averse to Flex, a bit more - involved - but still native windows application generator is Camelot
Edit
Instead of typing it out again - I would suggest the django + flex + pyamf article on Adobe that explains it all with screenshots as well. You can replace django with flask or bottle as they are more lightweight, however the PyAMF library provides native support for django which is why it was used in the example.
PyAMF provides Action Message Format (a binary protocol to exchange object with the flash runtime) support for Python.