Bottle framework and OOP, using method instead of function

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慢半拍i
慢半拍i 2020-12-04 10:46

I\'ve done some coding with Bottle. It\'s really simple and fits my needs. However, I got stick when I tried to wrap the application into a class :

import bo         


        
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5条回答
  • 2020-12-04 11:13

    I took @Skirmantas answer and modified it a bit to allow for keyword arguments in the decorator, like method, skip, etc:

    def routemethod(route, **kwargs):
        def decorator(f):
            f.route = route
            for arg in kwargs:
                setattr(f, arg, kwargs[arg])
            return f
        return decorator
    
    def routeapp(obj):
        for kw in dir(obj):
            attr = getattr(obj, kw)
            if hasattr(attr, "route"):
                if hasattr(attr, "method"):
                    method = getattr(attr, "method")
                else:
                    method = "GET"
                if hasattr(attr, "callback"):
                    callback = getattr(attr, "callback")
                else:
                    callback = None
                if hasattr(attr, "name"):
                    name = getattr(attr, "name")
                else:
                    name = None
                if hasattr(attr, "apply"):
                    aply = getattr(attr, "apply")
                else:
                    aply = None
                if hasattr(attr, "skip"):
                    skip = getattr(attr, "skip")
                else:
                    skip = None
    
                bottle.route(attr.route, method, callback, name, aply, skip)(attr)
    
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  • 2020-12-04 11:16

    Your code does not work because you are trying to route to non-bound methods. Non-bound methods do not have a reference to self, how could they, if instance of App has not been created?

    If you want to route to class methods, you first have to initialize your class and then bottle.route() to methods on that object like so:

    import bottle        
    
    class App(object):
        def __init__(self,param):
            self.param   = param
    
        def index1(self):
            return("I'm 1 | self.param = %s" % self.param)
    
    myapp = App(param='some param')
    bottle.route("/1")(myapp.index1)
    

    If you want to stick routes definitions near the handlers, you can do something like this:

    def routeapp(obj):
        for kw in dir(app):
            attr = getattr(app, kw)
            if hasattr(attr, 'route'):
                bottle.route(attr.route)(attr)
    
    class App(object):
        def __init__(self, config):
            self.config = config
    
        def index(self):
            pass
        index.route = '/index/'
    
    app = App({'config':1})
    routeapp(app)
    

    Don't do the bottle.route() part in App.__init__(), because you won't be able to create two instances of App class.

    If you like the syntax of decorators more than setting attribute index.route=, you can write a simple decorator:

    def methodroute(route):
        def decorator(f):
            f.route = route
            return f
        return decorator
    
    class App(object):
        @methodroute('/index/')
        def index(self):
            pass
    
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  • 2020-12-04 11:22

    try this, worked for me, documentation is also pretty decent to get started with ...

    https://github.com/techchunks/bottleCBV
    
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  • 2020-12-04 11:28

    Below works nicely for me :) Quite object orientated and easy to follow.

    from bottle import Bottle, template
    
    class Server:
        def __init__(self, host, port):
            self._host = host
            self._port = port
            self._app = Bottle()
            self._route()
    
        def _route(self):
            self._app.route('/', method="GET", callback=self._index)
            self._app.route('/hello/<name>', callback=self._hello)
    
        def start(self):
            self._app.run(host=self._host, port=self._port)
    
        def _index(self):
            return 'Welcome'
    
        def _hello(self, name="Guest"):
            return template('Hello {{name}}, how are you?', name=name)
    
    server = Server(host='localhost', port=8090)
    server.start()
    
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  • 2020-12-04 11:32

    You have to extend the Bottle class. It's instances are WSGI web applications.

    from bottle import Bottle
    
    class MyApp(Bottle):
        def __init__(self, name):
            super(MyApp, self).__init__()
            self.name = name
            self.route('/', callback=self.index)
    
        def index(self):
            return "Hello, my name is " + self.name
    
    app = MyApp('OOBottle')
    app.run(host='localhost', port=8080)
    

    What most examples out there are doing, including the answers previously provided to this question, are all reusing the "default app", not creating their own, and not using the convenience of object orientation and inheritance.

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