What are Flask Blueprints, exactly?

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感动是毒
感动是毒 2020-12-12 08:22

I have read the official Flask documentation on Blueprints and even one or two blog posts on using them.

I\'ve even used them in my web app, but I don\'t co

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  • 2020-12-12 09:00

    A Flask blueprint helps you to create reusable instances of your application. It does so by organizing your project in modules. Those modules are then registered the main application. They help in creating an application factory.

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  • 2020-12-12 09:05

    As pointed out in a comment by @Devasish, this article provides a good answer:

    http://exploreflask.com/en/latest/blueprints.html

    Quoting from the article:

    An example of this would be Facebook. If Facebook used Flask, it might have blueprints for the static pages (i.e. signed-out home, register, about, etc.), the dashboard (i.e. the news feed), profiles (/robert/about and /robert/photos), settings (/settings/security and /settings/privacy) and many more. These components all share a general layout and styles, but each has its own layout as well

    This is a very good interpretation, especially the part "if Facebook used Flask". It gives us a concrete situation to visualize how Blueprint actually works.

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  • 2020-12-12 09:11

    I too just stumbled up this myself and was confused after reading a few of the documentation sources. At first I thought it was like C#/Java Implementation style where you define some stuff but dont have to worry about it implementation dettails til later. However, I stumbled up this page which puts it in very very laymens (and quite hilarious present-day events) terms. https://hackersandslackers.com/flask-blueprints/

    Essentially one benefit that is mentioned in the link and provides me a clear idea of it's real world usage is that I can effectively logically organize/divide the app into several parts that only need to be concerned with it's own affairs. So it provides some designed encapsulation.

    Edit: I'm currently using it to segment out my webapps code. It was good decision too because I found the lead designer wants to make the frontend in Vue.js. Which I havent used yet but looking at it's project files would look far more messy and probably provide many naming collision prone.

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  • 2020-12-12 09:12

    A blueprint is a template for generating a "section" of a web application. You can think of it as a mold:

    A medallion mold with a gold medallion freshly removed from it

    You can take the blueprint and apply it to your application in several places. Each time you apply it the blueprint will create a new version of its structure in the plaster of your application.

    # An example
    from flask import Blueprint
    
    tree_mold = Blueprint("mold", __name__)
    
    @tree_mold.route("/leaves")
    def leaves():
        return "This tree has leaves"
    
    @tree_mold.route("/roots")
    def roots():
        return "And roots as well"
    
    @tree_mold.route("/rings")
    @tree_mold.route("/rings/<int:year>")
    def rings(year=None):
        return "Looking at the rings for {year}".format(year=year)
    

    This is a simple mold for working with trees - it says that any application that deals with trees should provide access to its leaves, its roots, and its rings (by year). By itself, it is a hollow shell - it cannot route, it cannot respond, until it is impressed upon an application:

    from tree_workshop import tree_mold
    
    app.register_blueprint(tree_mold, url_prefix="/oak")
    app.register_blueprint(tree_mold, url_prefix="/fir")
    app.register_blueprint(tree_mold, url_prefix="/ash")
    

    Once it is created it may be "impressed" on the application by using the register_blueprint function - this "impresses" the mold of the blueprint on the application at the locations specified by url_prefix.

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  • 2020-12-12 09:14

    For bigger projects, all your code shouldn't be in the same file. Instead you can segment or split bigger codes into separate file, mostly based on functionality. Like bricks forming a wall.

    Hope this helped. Since this is a theoretical question, posting no codes.

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