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