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Foreword
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========
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Read this before you get started with Flask. This hopefully answers some
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questions about the intention of the project, what it aims at and when you
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should or should not be using it.
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What does Micro Mean?
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---------------------
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The micro in microframework for me means on the one hand being small in
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size and complexity but on the other hand also that the complexity of the
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applications that are written with these frameworks do not exceed a
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certain size. A microframework like Flask sacrifices a few things in
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order to be approachable and to be as concise as possible.
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For example Flask uses thread local objects internally so that you don't
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have to pass objects around from function to function within a request in
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order to stay threadsafe. While this is a really easy approach and saves
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you a lot of time, it also does not scale well to large applications.
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It's especially painful for more complex unittests and when you suddenly
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have to deal with code being executed outside of the context of a request
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(for example if you have cronjobs).
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Flask provides some tools to deal with the downsides of this approach but
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the core problem of this approach obviously stays. It is also based on
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convention over configuration which means that a lot of things are
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preconfigured in Flask and will work well for smaller applications but not
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so much for larger ones (where and how it looks for templates, static
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files etc.)
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But don't worry if your application suddenly grows larger than it was
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initially and you're afraid Flask might not grow with it. Even with
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larger frameworks you sooner or later will find out that you need
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something the framework just cannot do for you without modification.
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If you are ever in that situation, check out the :ref:`becomingbig`
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chapter.
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A Framework and An Example
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--------------------------
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Flask is not only a microframework, it is also an example. Based on
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Flask, there will be a series of blog posts that explain how to create a
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framework. Flask itself is just one way to implement a framework on top
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of existing libraries. Unlike many other microframeworks Flask does not
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try to implement anything on its own, it reuses existing code.
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Web Development is Dangerous
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----------------------------
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I'm not even joking. Well, maybe a little. If you write a web
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application you are probably allowing users to register and leave their
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data on your server. The users are entrusting you with data. And even if
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you are the only user that might leave data in your application, you still
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want that data to be stored in a secure manner.
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Unfortunately there are many ways security of a web application can be
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compromised. Flask protects you against one of the most common security
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problems of modern web applications: cross site scripting (XSS). Unless
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you deliberately mark insecure HTML as secure Flask (and the underlying
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Jinja2 template engine) have you covered. But there are many more ways to
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cause security problems.
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Whenever something is dangerous where you have to watch out, the
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documentation will tell you so. Some of the security concerns of web
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development are far more complex than one might think and often we all end
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up in situations where we think "well, this is just far fetched, how could
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that possibly be exploited" and then an intelligent guy comes along and
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figures a way out to exploit that application. And don't think, your
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application is not important enough for hackers to take notice. Depending
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on the kind of attack, chances are there are automated botnets out there
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trying to figure out how to fill your database with viagra advertisements.
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So always keep that in mind when doing web development.
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Target Audience
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---------------
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Is Flask for you? If your application small-ish and does not depend on
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too complex database structures, Flask is the Framework for you. It was
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designed from the ground up to be easy to use, based on established
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principles, good intentions and on top of two established libraries in
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widespread usage. Recent versions of Flask scale nicely within reasonable
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bounds and if you grow larger, you won't have any troubles adjusting Flask
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for your new application size.
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Flask serves two purposes: it's an example of how to create a minimal and
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opinionated framework on top of Werkzeug to show how this can be done, and
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to provide people with a simple tool to prototype larger applications or
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to implement small and medium sized applications.
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If you suddenly discover that your application grows larger than
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originally intended, head over to the :ref:`becomingbig` section to see
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some possible solutions for larger applications.
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Satisfied? Then head over to the :ref:`installation`.
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