4.4 KiB
Class-Based Views
Class-based views are simply classes which implement response behaviour to requests. They provide a way to compartmentalise handling of different HTTP request types at the same endpoint. Rather than defining and decorating three different handler functions, one for each of an endpoint's supported request type, the endpoint can be assigned a class-based view.
Defining views
A class-based view should subclass HTTPMethodView
. You can then implement
class methods for every HTTP request type you want to support. If a request is
received that has no defined method, a 405: Method not allowed
response will
be generated.
To register a class-based view on an endpoint, the app.add_route
method is
used. The first argument should be the defined class with the method as_view
invoked, and the second should be the URL endpoint.
The available methods are get
, post
, put
, patch
, and delete
. A class
using all these methods would look like the following.
from sanic import Sanic
from sanic.views import HTTPMethodView
from sanic.response import text
app = Sanic('some_name')
class SimpleView(HTTPMethodView):
def get(self, request):
return text('I am get method')
def post(self, request):
return text('I am post method')
def put(self, request):
return text('I am put method')
def patch(self, request):
return text('I am patch method')
def delete(self, request):
return text('I am delete method')
app.add_route(SimpleView.as_view(), '/')
You can also use async
syntax.
from sanic import Sanic
from sanic.views import HTTPMethodView
from sanic.response import text
app = Sanic('some_name')
class SimpleAsyncView(HTTPMethodView):
async def get(self, request):
return text('I am async get method')
app.add_route(SimpleAsyncView.as_view(), '/')
URL parameters
If you need any URL parameters, as discussed in the routing guide, include them in the method definition.
class NameView(HTTPMethodView):
def get(self, request, name):
return text('Hello {}'.format(name))
app.add_route(NameView.as_view(), '/<name>')
Decorators
If you want to add any decorators to the class, you can set the decorators
class variable. These will be applied to the class when as_view
is called.
class ViewWithDecorator(HTTPMethodView):
decorators = [some_decorator_here]
def get(self, request, name):
return text('Hello I have a decorator')
def post(self, request, name):
return text("Hello I also have a decorator")
app.add_route(ViewWithDecorator.as_view(), '/url')
But if you just want to decorate some functions and not all functions, you can do as follows:
class ViewWithSomeDecorator(HTTPMethodView):
@staticmethod
@some_decorator_here
def get(request, name):
return text("Hello I have a decorator")
def post(self, request, name):
return text("Hello I don't have any decorators")
URL Building
If you wish to build a URL for an HTTPMethodView, remember that the class name will be the endpoint
that you will pass into url_for
. For example:
@app.route('/')
def index(request):
url = app.url_for('SpecialClassView')
return redirect(url)
class SpecialClassView(HTTPMethodView):
def get(self, request):
return text('Hello from the Special Class View!')
app.add_route(SpecialClassView.as_view(), '/special_class_view')
Using CompositionView
As an alternative to the HTTPMethodView
, you can use CompositionView
to
move handler functions outside of the view class.
Handler functions for each supported HTTP method are defined elsewhere in the
source, and then added to the view using the CompositionView.add
method. The
first parameter is a list of HTTP methods to handle (e.g. ['GET', 'POST']
),
and the second is the handler function. The following example shows
CompositionView
usage with both an external handler function and an inline
lambda:
from sanic import Sanic
from sanic.views import CompositionView
from sanic.response import text
app = Sanic(__name__)
def get_handler(request):
return text('I am a get method')
view = CompositionView()
view.add(['GET'], get_handler)
view.add(['POST', 'PUT'], lambda request: text('I am a post/put method'))
# Use the new view to handle requests to the base URL
app.add_route(view, '/')
Note: currently you cannot build a URL for a CompositionView using url_for
.