Larger Applications¶
For larger applications it’s a good idea to use a package instead of a module. That is quite simple. Imagine a small application looks like this:
/yourapplication
yourapplication.py
/static
style.css
/templates
layout.html
index.html
login.html
...
Simple Packages¶
To convert that into a larger one, just create a new folder
yourapplication
inside the existing one and move everything below it.
Then rename yourapplication.py
to __init__.py
. (Make sure to delete
all .pyc
files first, otherwise things would most likely break)
You should then end up with something like that:
/yourapplication
/yourapplication
__init__.py
/static
style.css
/templates
layout.html
index.html
login.html
...
But how do you run your application now? The naive python
yourapplication/__init__.py
will not work. Let’s just say that Python
does not want modules in packages to be the startup file. But that is not
a big problem, just add a new file called setup.py
next to the inner
yourapplication
folder with the following contents:
from setuptools import setup
setup(
name='yourapplication',
packages=['yourapplication'],
include_package_data=True,
install_requires=[
'flask',
],
)
In order to run the application you need to export an environment variable that tells Flask where to find the application instance:
export FLASK_APP=yourapplication
If you are outside of the project directory make sure to provide the exact path to your application directory. Similiarly you can turn on “debug mode” with this environment variable:
export FLASK_DEBUG=true
In order to install and run the application you need to issue the following commands:
pip install -e .
flask run
What did we gain from this? Now we can restructure the application a bit into multiple modules. The only thing you have to remember is the following quick checklist:
the Flask application object creation has to be in the
__init__.py
file. That way each module can import it safely and the __name__ variable will resolve to the correct package.all the view functions (the ones with a
route()
decorator on top) have to be imported in the__init__.py
file. Not the object itself, but the module it is in. Import the view module after the application object is created.
Here’s an example __init__.py
:
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
import yourapplication.views
And this is what views.py
would look like:
from yourapplication import app
@app.route('/')
def index():
return 'Hello World!'
You should then end up with something like that:
/yourapplication
setup.py
/yourapplication
__init__.py
views.py
/static
style.css
/templates
layout.html
index.html
login.html
...
Circular Imports
Every Python programmer hates them, and yet we just added some:
circular imports (That’s when two modules depend on each other. In this
case views.py
depends on __init__.py
). Be advised that this is a
bad idea in general but here it is actually fine. The reason for this is
that we are not actually using the views in __init__.py
and just
ensuring the module is imported and we are doing that at the bottom of
the file.
There are still some problems with that approach but if you want to use decorators there is no way around that. Check out the Becoming Big section for some inspiration how to deal with that.
Working with Blueprints¶
If you have larger applications it’s recommended to divide them into smaller groups where each group is implemented with the help of a blueprint. For a gentle introduction into this topic refer to the Modular Applications with Blueprints chapter of the documentation.