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Docs: FastHTML quick start
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<docs><doc title="FastHTML quick start" desc="A brief overview of many FastHTML features"># Web Devs Quickstart ## Installation ``` bash pip install python-fasthtml ``` ## A Minimal Application A minimal FastHTML application looks something like this: <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app() @rt("/") def get(): return Titled("FastHTML", P("Let's do this!")) serve() ``` </div> Line 1 We import what we need for rapid development! A carefully-curated set of FastHTML functions and other Python objects is brought into our global namespace for convenience. Line 3 We instantiate a FastHTML app with the `fast_app()` utility function. This provides a number of really useful defaults that we’ll take advantage of later in the tutorial. Line 5 We use the `rt()` decorator to tell FastHTML what to return when a user visits `/` in their browser. Line 6 We connect this route to HTTP GET requests by defining a view function called `get()`. Line 7 A tree of Python function calls that return all the HTML required to write a properly formed web page. You’ll soon see the power of this approach. Line 9 The `serve()` utility configures and runs FastHTML using a library called `uvicorn`. Run the code: ``` bash python main.py ``` The terminal will look like this: ``` bash INFO: Uvicorn running on http://0.0.0.0:5001 (Press CTRL+C to quit) INFO: Started reloader process [58058] using WatchFiles INFO: Started server process [58060] INFO: Waiting for application startup. INFO: Application startup complete. ``` Confirm FastHTML is running by opening your web browser to [127.0.0.1:5001](http://127.0.0.1:5001). You should see something like the image below: ![](quickstart-web-dev/quickstart-fasthtml.png) <div> > **Note** > > While some linters and developers will complain about the wildcard > import, it is by design here and perfectly safe. FastHTML is very > deliberate about the objects it exports in `fasthtml.common`. If it > bothers you, you can import the objects you need individually, though > it will make the code more verbose and less readable. > > If you want to learn more about how FastHTML handles imports, we cover > that [here](https://docs.fastht.ml/explains/faq.html#why-use-import). </div> ## A Minimal Charting Application The [`Script`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/xtend.html#script) function allows you to include JavaScript. You can use Python to generate parts of your JS or JSON like this: ``` python import json from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app(hdrs=(Script(src="https://cdn.plot.ly/plotly-2.32.0.min.js"),)) data = json.dumps({ "data": [{"x": [1, 2, 3, 4],"type": "scatter"}, {"x": [1, 2, 3, 4],"y": [16, 5, 11, 9],"type": "scatter"}], "title": "Plotly chart in FastHTML ", "description": "This is a demo dashboard", "type": "scatter" }) @rt("/") def get(): return Titled("Chart Demo", Div(id="myDiv"), Script(f"var data = {data}; Plotly.newPlot('myDiv', data);")) serve() ``` ## Debug Mode When we can’t figure out a bug in FastHTML, we can run it in `DEBUG` mode. When an error is thrown, the error screen is displayed in the browser. This error setting should never be used in a deployed app. ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app(debug=True) @rt("/") def get(): 1/0 return Titled("FastHTML Error!", P("Let's error!")) serve() ``` Line 3 `debug=True` sets debug mode on. Line 7 Python throws an error when it tries to divide an integer by zero. ## Routing FastHTML builds upon FastAPI’s friendly decorator pattern for specifying URLs, with extra features: <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app() @rt("/") def get(): return Titled("FastHTML", P("Let's do this!")) @rt("/hello") def get(): return Titled("Hello, world!") serve() ``` </div> Line 5 The “/” URL on line 5 is the home of a project. This would be accessed at [127.0.0.1:5001](http://127.0.0.1:5001). Line 9 “/hello” URL on line 9 will be found by the project if the user visits [127.0.0.1:5001/hello](http://127.0.0.1:5001/hello). <div> > **Tip** > > It looks like `get()` is being defined twice, but that’s not the case. > Each function decorated with `rt` is totally separate, and is injected > into the router. We’re not calling them in the module’s namespace > (`locals()`). Rather, we’re loading them into the routing mechanism > using the `rt` decorator. </div> You can do more! Read on to learn what we can do to make parts of the URL dynamic. ## Variables in URLs You can add variable sections to a URL by marking them with `{variable_name}`. Your function then receives the `{variable_name}` as a keyword argument, but only if it is the correct type. Here’s an example: <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app() @rt("/{name}/{age}") def get(name: str, age: int): return Titled(f"Hello {name.title()}, age {age}") serve() ``` </div> Line 5 We specify two variable names, `name` and `age`. Line 6 We define two function arguments named identically to the variables. You will note that we specify the Python types to be passed. Line 7 We use these functions in our project. Try it out by going to this address: [127.0.0.1:5001/uma/5](http://127.0.0.1:5001/uma/5). You should get a page that says, > “Hello Uma, age 5”. ### What happens if we enter incorrect data? The [127.0.0.1:5001/uma/5](http://127.0.0.1:5001/uma/5) URL works because `5` is an integer. If we enter something that is not, such as [127.0.0.1:5001/uma/five](http://127.0.0.1:5001/uma/five), then FastHTML will return an error instead of a web page. <div> > **FastHTML URL routing supports more complex types** > > The two examples we provide here use Python’s built-in `str` and `int` > types, but you can use your own types, including more complex ones > such as those defined by libraries like > [attrs](https://pypi.org/project/attrs/), > [pydantic](https://pypi.org/project/pydantic/), and even > [sqlmodel](https://pypi.org/project/sqlmodel/). </div> ## HTTP Methods FastHTML matches function names to HTTP methods. So far the URL routes we’ve defined have been for HTTP GET methods, the most common method for web pages. Form submissions often are sent as HTTP POST. When dealing with more dynamic web page designs, also known as Single Page Apps (SPA for short), the need can arise for other methods such as HTTP PUT and HTTP DELETE. The way FastHTML handles this is by changing the function name. <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app() @rt("/") def get(): return Titled("HTTP GET", P("Handle GET")) @rt("/") def post(): return Titled("HTTP POST", P("Handle POST")) serve() ``` </div> Line 6 On line 6 because the `get()` function name is used, this will handle HTTP GETs going to the `/` URI. Line 10 On line 10 because the `post()` function name is used, this will handle HTTP POSTs going to the `/` URI. ## CSS Files and Inline Styles Here we modify default headers to demonstrate how to use the [Sakura CSS microframework](https://github.com/oxalorg/sakura) instead of FastHTML’s default of Pico CSS. <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app, rt = fast_app( pico=False, hdrs=( Link(rel='stylesheet', href='assets/normalize.min.css', type='text/css'), Link(rel='stylesheet', href='assets/sakura.css', type='text/css'), Style("p {color: red;}") )) @app.get("/") def home(): return Titled("FastHTML", P("Let's do this!"), ) serve() ``` </div> Line 4 By setting `pico` to `False`, FastHTML will not include `pico.min.css`. Line 7 This will generate an HTML `<link>` tag for sourcing the css for Sakura. Line 8 If you want an inline styles, the `Style()` function will put the result into the HTML. ## Other Static Media File Locations As you saw, [`Script`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/xtend.html#script) and `Link` are specific to the most common static media use cases in web apps: including JavaScript, CSS, and images. But it also works with videos and other static media files. The default behavior is to look for these files in the root directory - typically we don’t do anything special to include them. We can change the default directory that is looked in for files by adding the `static_path` parameter to the [`fast_app`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/fastapp.html#fast_app) function. ``` python app, rt = fast_app(static_path='public') ``` FastHTML also allows us to define a route that uses `FileResponse` to serve the file at a specified path. This is useful for serving images, videos, and other media files from a different directory without having to change the paths of many files. So if we move the directory containing the media files, we only need to change the path in one place. In the example below, we call images from a directory called `public`. ``` python @rt("/{fname:path}.{ext:static}") async def get(fname:str, ext:str): return FileResponse(f'public/{fname}.{ext}') ``` ## Rendering Markdown ``` python from fasthtml.common import * hdrs = (MarkdownJS(), HighlightJS(langs=['python', 'javascript', 'html', 'css']), ) app, rt = fast_app(hdrs=hdrs) content = """ Here are some _markdown_ elements. - This is a list item - This is another list item - And this is a third list item **Fenced code blocks work here.** """ @rt('/') def get(req): return Titled("Markdown rendering example", Div(content,cls="marked")) serve() ``` ## Code highlighting Here’s how to highlight code without any markdown configuration. ``` python from fasthtml.common import * # Add the HighlightJS built-in header hdrs = (HighlightJS(langs=['python', 'javascript', 'html', 'css']),) app, rt = fast_app(hdrs=hdrs) code_example = """ import datetime import time for i in range(10): print(f"{datetime.datetime.now()}") time.sleep(1) """ @rt('/') def get(req): return Titled("Markdown rendering example", Div( # The code example needs to be surrounded by # Pre & Code elements Pre(Code(code_example)) )) serve() ``` ## Defining new `ft` components We can build our own `ft` components and combine them with other components. The simplest method is defining them as a function. ``` python from fasthtml.common import * ``` ``` python def hero(title, statement): return Div(H1(title),P(statement), cls="hero") # usage example Main( hero("Hello World", "This is a hero statement") ) ``` ``` html <main> <div class="hero"> <h1>Hello World</h1> <p>This is a hero statement</p> </div> </main> ``` ### Pass through components For when we need to define a new component that allows zero-to-many components to be nested within them, we lean on Python’s `*args` and `**kwargs` mechanism. Useful for creating page layout controls. ``` python def layout(*args, **kwargs): """Dashboard layout for all our dashboard views""" return Main( H1("Dashboard"), Div(*args, **kwargs), cls="dashboard", ) # usage example layout( Ul(*[Li(o) for o in range(3)]), P("Some content", cls="description"), ) ``` ``` html <main class="dashboard"> <h1>Dashboard</h1> <div> <ul> <li>0</li> <li>1</li> <li>2</li> </ul> <p class="description">Some content</p> </div> </main> ``` ### Dataclasses as ft components While functions are easy to read, for more complex components some might find it easier to use a dataclass. ``` python from dataclasses import dataclass @dataclass class Hero: title: str statement: str def __ft__(self): """ The __ft__ method renders the dataclass at runtime.""" return Div(H1(self.title),P(self.statement), cls="hero") # usage example Main( Hero("Hello World", "This is a hero statement") ) ``` ``` html <main> <div class="hero"> <h1>Hello World</h1> <p>This is a hero statement</p> </div> </main> ``` ## Testing views in notebooks Because of the ASGI event loop it is currently impossible to run FastHTML inside a notebook. However, we can still test the output of our views. To do this, we leverage Starlette, an ASGI toolkit that FastHTML uses. ``` python # First we instantiate our app, in this case we remove the # default headers to reduce the size of the output. app, rt = fast_app(default_hdrs=False) # Setting up the Starlette test client from starlette.testclient import TestClient client = TestClient(app) # Usage example @rt("/") def get(): return Titled("FastHTML is awesome", P("The fastest way to create web apps in Python")) print(client.get("/").text) ``` <!doctype html> <html> <head> <title>FastHTML is awesome</title> </head> <body> <main class="container"> <h1>FastHTML is awesome</h1> <p>The fastest way to create web apps in Python</p> </main> </body> </html> ## Forms To validate data coming from users, first define a dataclass representing the data you want to check. Here’s an example representing a signup form. ``` python from dataclasses import dataclass @dataclass class Profile: email:str; phone:str; age:int ``` Create an FT component representing an empty version of that form. Don’t pass in any value to fill the form, that gets handled later. ``` python profile_form = Form(method="post", action="/profile")( Fieldset( Label('Email', Input(name="email")), Label("Phone", Input(name="phone")), Label("Age", Input(name="age")), ), Button("Save", type="submit"), ) profile_form ``` ``` html <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/profile"> <fieldset> <label> Email <input name="email"> </label> <label> Phone <input name="phone"> </label> <label> Age <input name="age"> </label> </fieldset> <button type="submit">Save</button> </form> ``` Once the dataclass and form function are completed, we can add data to the form. To do that, instantiate the profile dataclass: ``` python profile = Profile(email='john@example.com', phone='123456789', age=5) profile ``` Profile(email='john@example.com', phone='123456789', age=5) Then add that data to the `profile_form` using FastHTML’s [`fill_form`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/components.html#fill_form) class: ``` python fill_form(profile_form, profile) ``` ``` html <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/profile"> <fieldset> <label> Email <input name="email" value="john@example.com"> </label> <label> Phone <input name="phone" value="123456789"> </label> <label> Age <input name="age" value="5"> </label> </fieldset> <button type="submit">Save</button> </form> ``` ### Forms with views The usefulness of FastHTML forms becomes more apparent when they are combined with FastHTML views. We’ll show how this works by using the test client from above. First, let’s create a SQlite database: ``` python db = Database("profiles.db") profiles = db.create(Profile, pk="email") ``` Now we insert a record into the database: ``` python profiles.insert(profile) ``` Profile(email='john@example.com', phone='123456789', age=5) And we can then demonstrate in the code that form is filled and displayed to the user. ``` python @rt("/profile/{email}") def profile(email:str): profile = profiles[email] filled_profile_form = fill_form(profile_form, profile) return Titled(f'Profile for {profile.email}', filled_profile_form) print(client.get(f"/profile/john@example.com").text) ``` Line 3 Fetch the profile using the profile table’s `email` primary key Line 4 Fill the form for display. <!doctype html> <html> <head> <title>Profile for john@example.com</title> </head> <body> <main class="container"> <h1>Profile for john@example.com</h1> <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/profile"> <fieldset> <label> Email <input name="email" value="john@example.com"> </label> <label> Phone <input name="phone" value="123456789"> </label> <label> Age <input name="age" value="5"> </label> </fieldset> <button type="submit">Save</button> </form> </main> </body> </html> And now let’s demonstrate making a change to the data. ``` python @rt("/profile") def post(profile: Profile): profiles.update(profile) return RedirectResponse(url=f"/profile/{profile.email}") new_data = dict(email='john@example.com', phone='7654321', age=25) print(client.post("/profile", data=new_data).text) ``` Line 2 We use the `Profile` dataclass definition to set the type for the incoming `profile` content. This validates the field types for the incoming data Line 3 Taking our validated data, we updated the profiles table Line 4 We redirect the user back to their profile view Line 7 The display is of the profile form view showing the changes in data. <!doctype html> <html> <head> <title>Profile for john@example.com</title> </head> <body> <main class="container"> <h1>Profile for john@example.com</h1> <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/profile"> <fieldset> <label> Email <input name="email" value="john@example.com"> </label> <label> Phone <input name="phone" value="7654321"> </label> <label> Age <input name="age" value="25"> </label> </fieldset> <button type="submit">Save</button> </form> </main> </body> </html> ## Strings and conversion order The general rules for rendering are: - `__ft__` method will be called (for default components like `P`, `H2`, etc. or if you define your own components) - If you pass a string, it will be escaped - On other python objects, `str()` will be called As a consequence, if you want to include plain HTML tags directly into e.g. a `Div()` they will get escaped by default (as a security measure to avoid code injections). This can be avoided by using `NotStr()`, a convenient way to reuse python code that returns already HTML. If you use pandas, you can use `pandas.DataFrame.to_html()` to get a nice table. To include the output a FastHTML, wrap it in `NotStr()`, like `Div(NotStr(df.to_html()))`. Above we saw how a dataclass behaves with the `__ft__` method defined. On a plain dataclass, `str()` will be called (but not escaped). ``` python from dataclasses import dataclass @dataclass class Hero: title: str statement: str # rendering the dataclass with the default method Main( Hero("<h1>Hello World</h1>", "This is a hero statement") ) ``` ``` html <main>Hero(title='<h1>Hello World</h1>', statement='This is a hero statement')</main> ``` ``` python # This will display the HTML as text on your page Div("Let's include some HTML here: <div>Some HTML</div>") ``` ``` html <div>Let&#x27;s include some HTML here: &lt;div&gt;Some HTML&lt;/div&gt;</div> ``` ``` python # Keep the string untouched, will be rendered on the page Div(NotStr("<div><h1>Some HTML</h1></div>")) ``` ``` html <div><div><h1>Some HTML</h1></div></div> ``` ## Custom exception handlers FastHTML allows customization of exception handlers, but does so gracefully. What this means is by default it includes all the `<html>` tags needed to display attractive content. Try it out! ``` python from fasthtml.common import * def not_found(req, exc): return Titled("404: I don't exist!") exception_handlers = {404: not_found} app, rt = fast_app(exception_handlers=exception_handlers) @rt('/') def get(): return (Titled("Home page", P(A(href="/oops")("Click to generate 404 error")))) serve() ``` We can also use lambda to make things more terse: ``` python from fasthtml.common import * exception_handlers={ 404: lambda req, exc: Titled("404: I don't exist!"), 418: lambda req, exc: Titled("418: I'm a teapot!") } app, rt = fast_app(exception_handlers=exception_handlers) @rt('/') def get(): return (Titled("Home page", P(A(href="/oops")("Click to generate 404 error")))) serve() ``` ## Cookies We can set cookies using the `cookie()` function. In our example, we’ll create a `timestamp` cookie. ``` python from datetime import datetime from IPython.display import HTML ``` ``` python @rt("/settimestamp") def get(req): now = datetime.now() return P(f'Set to {now}'), cookie('now', datetime.now()) HTML(client.get('/settimestamp').text) ``` <!doctype html> &#10; <html> <head> <title>FastHTML page</title> </head> <body> <p>Set to 2024-09-04 18:30:34.896373</p> </body> </html> Now let’s get it back using the same name for our parameter as the cookie name. ``` python @rt('/gettimestamp') def get(now:parsed_date): return f'Cookie was set at time {now.time()}' client.get('/gettimestamp').text ``` 'Cookie was set at time 18:30:34.896405' ## Sessions For convenience and security, FastHTML has a mechanism for storing small amounts of data in the user’s browser. We can do this by adding a `session` argument to routes. FastHTML sessions are Python dictionaries, and we can leverage to our benefit. The example below shows how to concisely set and get sessions. ``` python @rt('/adder/{num}') def get(session, num: int): session.setdefault('sum', 0) session['sum'] = session.get('sum') + num return Response(f'The sum is {session["sum"]}.') ``` ## Toasts (also known as Messages) Toasts, sometimes called “Messages” are small notifications usually in colored boxes used to notify users that something has happened. Toasts can be of four types: - info - success - warning - error Examples toasts might include: - “Payment accepted” - “Data submitted” - “Request approved” Toasts require the use of the `setup_toasts()` function plus every view needs these two features: - The session argument - Must return FT components ``` python setup_toasts(app) @rt('/toasting') def get(session): # Normally one toast is enough, this allows us to see # different toast types in action. add_toast(session, f"Toast is being cooked", "info") add_toast(session, f"Toast is ready", "success") add_toast(session, f"Toast is getting a bit crispy", "warning") add_toast(session, f"Toast is burning!", "error") return Titled("I like toast") ``` Line 1 `setup_toasts` is a helper function that adds toast dependencies. Usually this would be declared right after `fast_app()` Line 4 Toasts require sessions Line 11 Views with Toasts must return FT components. ## Authentication and authorization In FastHTML the tasks of authentication and authorization are handled with Beforeware. Beforeware are functions that run before the route handler is called. They are useful for global tasks like ensuring users are authenticated or have permissions to access a view. First, we write a function that accepts a request and session arguments: ``` python # Status code 303 is a redirect that can change POST to GET, # so it's appropriate for a login page. login_redir = RedirectResponse('/login', status_code=303) def user_auth_before(req, sess): # The `auth` key in the request scope is automatically provided # to any handler which requests it, and can not be injected # by the user using query params, cookies, etc, so it should # be secure to use. auth = req.scope['auth'] = sess.get('auth', None) # If the session key is not there, it redirects to the login page. if not auth: return login_redir ``` Now we pass our `user_auth_before` function as the first argument into a [`Beforeware`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/core.html#beforeware) class. We also pass a list of regular expressions to the `skip` argument, designed to allow users to still get to the home and login pages. ``` python beforeware = Beforeware( user_auth_before, skip=[r'/favicon\.ico', r'/static/.*', r'.*\.css', r'.*\.js', '/login', '/'] ) app, rt = fast_app(before=beforeware) ``` ## Server-sent events (SSE) With [server-sent events](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Server-sent_events), it’s possible for a server to send new data to a web page at any time, by pushing messages to the web page. Unlike WebSockets, SSE can only go in one direction: server to client. SSE is also part of the HTTP specification unlike WebSockets which uses its own specification. FastHTML introduces several tools for working with SSE which are covered in the example below. While concise, there’s a lot going on in this function so we’ve annotated it quite a bit. ``` python import random from asyncio import sleep from fasthtml.common import * hdrs=(Script(src="https://unpkg.com/htmx-ext-sse@2.2.1/sse.js"),) app,rt = fast_app(hdrs=hdrs) @rt def index(): return Titled("SSE Random Number Generator", P("Generate pairs of random numbers, as the list grows scroll downwards."), Div(hx_ext="sse", sse_connect="/number-stream", hx_swap="beforeend show:bottom", sse_swap="message")) shutdown_event = signal_shutdown() async def number_generator(): while not shutdown_event.is_set(): data = Article(random.randint(1, 100)) yield sse_message(data) await sleep(1) @rt("/number-stream") async def get(): return EventStream(number_generator()) ``` Line 5 Import the HTMX SSE extension Line 12 Tell HTMX to load the SSE extension Line 13 Look at the `/number-stream` endpoint for SSE content Line 14 When new items come in from the SSE endpoint, add them at the end of the current content within the div. If they go beyond the screen, scroll downwards Line 15 Specify the name of the event. FastHTML’s default event name is “message”. Only change if you have more than one call to SSE endpoints within a view Line 17 Set up the asyncio event loop Line 19 Don’t forget to make this an `async` function! Line 20 Iterate through the asyncio event loop Line 22 We yield the data. Data ideally should be comprised of FT components as that plugs nicely into HTMX in the browser Line 26 The endpoint view needs to be an async function that returns a [`EventStream`](https://AnswerDotAI.github.io/fasthtml/api/core.html#eventstream) <div> > **New content as of September 1, 2024** > > - [Forms](../tutorials/quickstart_for_web_devs.html#forms) > - [Server-side Events > (SSE)](../tutorials/quickstart_for_web_devs.html#server-sent-events-sse) > > We’re going to be adding more to this document, so check back > frequently for updates. </div> ## Unwritten quickstart sections - Websockets - Tables</doc></docs></project>
xml
llms.txt
Docs: HTMX reference
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<docs><doc title="HTMX reference" desc="Brief description of all HTMX attributes, CSS classes, headers, events, extensions, js lib methods, and config options">+++ title = "Reference" +++ ## Contents * [htmx Core Attributes](#attributes) * [htmx Additional Attributes](#attributes-additional) * [htmx CSS Classes](#classes) * [htmx Request Headers](#request_headers) * [htmx Response Headers](#response_headers) * [htmx Events](#events) * [htmx Extensions](https://extensions.htmx.org) * [JavaScript API](#api) * [Configuration Options](#config) ## Core Attribute Reference {#attributes} The most common attributes when using htmx. <div class="info-table"> | Attribute | Description | |--------------------------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | [`hx-get`](@/attributes/hx-get.md) | issues a `GET` to the specified URL | | [`hx-post`](@/attributes/hx-post.md) | issues a `POST` to the specified URL | | [`hx-on*`](@/attributes/hx-on.md) | handle events with inline scripts on elements | | [`hx-push-url`](@/attributes/hx-push-url.md) | push a URL into the browser location bar to create history | | [`hx-select`](@/attributes/hx-select.md) | select content to swap in from a response | | [`hx-select-oob`](@/attributes/hx-select-oob.md) | select content to swap in from a response, somewhere other than the target (out of band) | | [`hx-swap`](@/attributes/hx-swap.md) | controls how content will swap in (`outerHTML`, `beforeend`, `afterend`, ...) | | [`hx-swap-oob`](@/attributes/hx-swap-oob.md) | mark element to swap in from a response (out of band) | | [`hx-target`](@/attributes/hx-target.md) | specifies the target element to be swapped | | [`hx-trigger`](@/attributes/hx-trigger.md) | specifies the event that triggers the request | | [`hx-vals`](@/attributes/hx-vals.md) | add values to submit with the request (JSON format) | </div> ## Additional Attribute Reference {#attributes-additional} All other attributes available in htmx. <div class="info-table"> | Attribute | Description | |------------------------------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | [`hx-boost`](@/attributes/hx-boost.md) | add [progressive enhancement](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_enhancement) for links and forms | | [`hx-confirm`](@/attributes/hx-confirm.md) | shows a `confirm()` dialog before issuing a request | | [`hx-delete`](@/attributes/hx-delete.md) | issues a `DELETE` to the specified URL | | [`hx-disable`](@/attributes/hx-disable.md) | disables htmx processing for the given node and any children nodes | | [`hx-disabled-elt`](@/attributes/hx-disabled-elt.md) | adds the `disabled` attribute to the specified elements while a request is in flight | | [`hx-disinherit`](@/attributes/hx-disinherit.md) | control and disable automatic attribute inheritance for child nodes | | [`hx-encoding`](@/attributes/hx-encoding.md) | changes the request encoding type | | [`hx-ext`](@/attributes/hx-ext.md) | extensions to use for this element | | [`hx-headers`](@/attributes/hx-headers.md) | adds to the headers that will be submitted with the request | | [`hx-history`](@/attributes/hx-history.md) | prevent sensitive data being saved to the history cache | | [`hx-history-elt`](@/attributes/hx-history-elt.md) | the element to snapshot and restore during history navigation | | [`hx-include`](@/attributes/hx-include.md) | include additional data in requests | | [`hx-indicator`](@/attributes/hx-indicator.md) | the element to put the `htmx-request` class on during the request | | [`hx-inherit`](@/attributes/hx-inherit.md) | control and enable automatic attribute inheritance for child nodes if it has been disabled by default | | [`hx-params`](@/attributes/hx-params.md) | filters the parameters that will be submitted with a request | | [`hx-patch`](@/attributes/hx-patch.md) | issues a `PATCH` to the specified URL | | [`hx-preserve`](@/attributes/hx-preserve.md) | specifies elements to keep unchanged between requests | | [`hx-prompt`](@/attributes/hx-prompt.md) | shows a `prompt()` before submitting a request | | [`hx-put`](@/attributes/hx-put.md) | issues a `PUT` to the specified URL | | [`hx-replace-url`](@/attributes/hx-replace-url.md) | replace the URL in the browser location bar | | [`hx-request`](@/attributes/hx-request.md) | configures various aspects of the request | | [`hx-sync`](@/attributes/hx-sync.md) | control how requests made by different elements are synchronized | | [`hx-validate`](@/attributes/hx-validate.md) | force elements to validate themselves before a request | | [`hx-vars`](@/attributes/hx-vars.md) | adds values dynamically to the parameters to submit with the request (deprecated, please use [`hx-vals`](@/attributes/hx-vals.md)) | </div> ## CSS Class Reference {#classes} <div class="info-table"> | Class | Description | |-----------|-------------| | `htmx-added` | Applied to a new piece of content before it is swapped, removed after it is settled. | `htmx-indicator` | A dynamically generated class that will toggle visible (opacity:1) when a `htmx-request` class is present | `htmx-request` | Applied to either the element or the element specified with [`hx-indicator`](@/attributes/hx-indicator.md) while a request is ongoing | `htmx-settling` | Applied to a target after content is swapped, removed after it is settled. The duration can be modified via [`hx-swap`](@/attributes/hx-swap.md). | `htmx-swapping` | Applied to a target before any content is swapped, removed after it is swapped. The duration can be modified via [`hx-swap`](@/attributes/hx-swap.md). </div> ## HTTP Header Reference {#headers} ### Request Headers Reference {#request_headers} <div class="info-table"> | Header | Description | |--------|-------------| | `HX-Boosted` | indicates that the request is via an element using [hx-boost](@/attributes/hx-boost.md) | `HX-Current-URL` | the current URL of the browser | `HX-History-Restore-Request` | "true" if the request is for history restoration after a miss in the local history cache | `HX-Prompt` | the user response to an [hx-prompt](@/attributes/hx-prompt.md) | `HX-Request` | always "true" | `HX-Target` | the `id` of the target element if it exists | `HX-Trigger-Name` | the `name` of the triggered element if it exists | `HX-Trigger` | the `id` of the triggered element if it exists </div> ### Response Headers Reference {#response_headers} <div class="info-table"> | Header | Description | |------------------------------------------------------|-------------| | [`HX-Location`](@/headers/hx-location.md) | allows you to do a client-side redirect that does not do a full page reload | [`HX-Push-Url`](@/headers/hx-push-url.md) | pushes a new url into the history stack | [`HX-Redirect`](@/headers/hx-redirect.md) | can be used to do a client-side redirect to a new location | `HX-Refresh` | if set to "true" the client-side will do a full refresh of the page | [`HX-Replace-Url`](@/headers/hx-replace-url.md) | replaces the current URL in the location bar | `HX-Reswap` | allows you to specify how the response will be swapped. See [hx-swap](@/attributes/hx-swap.md) for possible values | `HX-Retarget` | a CSS selector that updates the target of the content update to a different element on the page | `HX-Reselect` | a CSS selector that allows you to choose which part of the response is used to be swapped in. Overrides an existing [`hx-select`](@/attributes/hx-select.md) on the triggering element | [`HX-Trigger`](@/headers/hx-trigger.md) | allows you to trigger client-side events | [`HX-Trigger-After-Settle`](@/headers/hx-trigger.md) | allows you to trigger client-side events after the settle step | [`HX-Trigger-After-Swap`](@/headers/hx-trigger.md) | allows you to trigger client-side events after the swap step </div> ## Event Reference {#events} <div class="info-table"> | Event | Description | |-------|-------------| | [`htmx:abort`](@/events.md#htmx:abort) | send this event to an element to abort a request | [`htmx:afterOnLoad`](@/events.md#htmx:afterOnLoad) | triggered after an AJAX request has completed processing a successful response | [`htmx:afterProcessNode`](@/events.md#htmx:afterProcessNode) | triggered after htmx has initialized a node | [`htmx:afterRequest`](@/events.md#htmx:afterRequest) | triggered after an AJAX request has completed | [`htmx:afterSettle`](@/events.md#htmx:afterSettle) | triggered after the DOM has settled | [`htmx:afterSwap`](@/events.md#htmx:afterSwap) | triggered after new content has been swapped in | [`htmx:beforeCleanupElement`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeCleanupElement) | triggered before htmx [disables](@/attributes/hx-disable.md) an element or removes it from the DOM | [`htmx:beforeOnLoad`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeOnLoad) | triggered before any response processing occurs | [`htmx:beforeProcessNode`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeProcessNode) | triggered before htmx initializes a node | [`htmx:beforeRequest`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeRequest) | triggered before an AJAX request is made | [`htmx:beforeSwap`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeSwap) | triggered before a swap is done, allows you to configure the swap | [`htmx:beforeSend`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeSend) | triggered just before an ajax request is sent | [`htmx:configRequest`](@/events.md#htmx:configRequest) | triggered before the request, allows you to customize parameters, headers | [`htmx:confirm`](@/events.md#htmx:confirm) | triggered after a trigger occurs on an element, allows you to cancel (or delay) issuing the AJAX request | [`htmx:historyCacheError`](@/events.md#htmx:historyCacheError) | triggered on an error during cache writing | [`htmx:historyCacheMiss`](@/events.md#htmx:historyCacheMiss) | triggered on a cache miss in the history subsystem | [`htmx:historyCacheMissError`](@/events.md#htmx:historyCacheMissError) | triggered on a unsuccessful remote retrieval | [`htmx:historyCacheMissLoad`](@/events.md#htmx:historyCacheMissLoad) | triggered on a successful remote retrieval | [`htmx:historyRestore`](@/events.md#htmx:historyRestore) | triggered when htmx handles a history restoration action | [`htmx:beforeHistorySave`](@/events.md#htmx:beforeHistorySave) | triggered before content is saved to the history cache | [`htmx:load`](@/events.md#htmx:load) | triggered when new content is added to the DOM | [`htmx:noSSESourceError`](@/events.md#htmx:noSSESourceError) | triggered when an element refers to a SSE event in its trigger, but no parent SSE source has been defined | [`htmx:onLoadError`](@/events.md#htmx:onLoadError) | triggered when an exception occurs during the onLoad handling in htmx | [`htmx:oobAfterSwap`](@/events.md#htmx:oobAfterSwap) | triggered after an out of band element as been swapped in | [`htmx:oobBeforeSwap`](@/events.md#htmx:oobBeforeSwap) | triggered before an out of band element swap is done, allows you to configure the swap | [`htmx:oobErrorNoTarget`](@/events.md#htmx:oobErrorNoTarget) | triggered when an out of band element does not have a matching ID in the current DOM | [`htmx:prompt`](@/events.md#htmx:prompt) | triggered after a prompt is shown | [`htmx:pushedIntoHistory`](@/events.md#htmx:pushedIntoHistory) | triggered after an url is pushed into history | [`htmx:responseError`](@/events.md#htmx:responseError) | triggered when an HTTP response error (non-`200` or `300` response code) occurs | [`htmx:sendError`](@/events.md#htmx:sendError) | triggered when a network error prevents an HTTP request from happening | [`htmx:sseError`](@/events.md#htmx:sseError) | triggered when an error occurs with a SSE source | [`htmx:sseOpen`](/events#htmx:sseOpen) | triggered when a SSE source is opened | [`htmx:swapError`](@/events.md#htmx:swapError) | triggered when an error occurs during the swap phase | [`htmx:targetError`](@/events.md#htmx:targetError) | triggered when an invalid target is specified | [`htmx:timeout`](@/events.md#htmx:timeout) | triggered when a request timeout occurs | [`htmx:validation:validate`](@/events.md#htmx:validation:validate) | triggered before an element is validated | [`htmx:validation:failed`](@/events.md#htmx:validation:failed) | triggered when an element fails validation | [`htmx:validation:halted`](@/events.md#htmx:validation:halted) | triggered when a request is halted due to validation errors | [`htmx:xhr:abort`](@/events.md#htmx:xhr:abort) | triggered when an ajax request aborts | [`htmx:xhr:loadend`](@/events.md#htmx:xhr:loadend) | triggered when an ajax request ends | [`htmx:xhr:loadstart`](@/events.md#htmx:xhr:loadstart) | triggered when an ajax request starts | [`htmx:xhr:progress`](@/events.md#htmx:xhr:progress) | triggered periodically during an ajax request that supports progress events </div> ## JavaScript API Reference {#api} <div class="info-table"> | Method | Description | |-------|-------------| | [`htmx.addClass()`](@/api.md#addClass) | Adds a class to the given element | [`htmx.ajax()`](@/api.md#ajax) | Issues an htmx-style ajax request | [`htmx.closest()`](@/api.md#closest) | Finds the closest parent to the given element matching the selector | [`htmx.config`](@/api.md#config) | A property that holds the current htmx config object | [`htmx.createEventSource`](@/api.md#createEventSource) | A property holding the function to create SSE EventSource objects for htmx | [`htmx.createWebSocket`](@/api.md#createWebSocket) | A property holding the function to create WebSocket objects for htmx | [`htmx.defineExtension()`](@/api.md#defineExtension) | Defines an htmx [extension](https://extensions.htmx.org) | [`htmx.find()`](@/api.md#find) | Finds a single element matching the selector | [`htmx.findAll()` `htmx.findAll(elt, selector)`](@/api.md#find) | Finds all elements matching a given selector | [`htmx.logAll()`](@/api.md#logAll) | Installs a logger that will log all htmx events | [`htmx.logger`](@/api.md#logger) | A property set to the current logger (default is `null`) | [`htmx.off()`](@/api.md#off) | Removes an event listener from the given element | [`htmx.on()`](@/api.md#on) | Creates an event listener on the given element, returning it | [`htmx.onLoad()`](@/api.md#onLoad) | Adds a callback handler for the `htmx:load` event | [`htmx.parseInterval()`](@/api.md#parseInterval) | Parses an interval declaration into a millisecond value | [`htmx.process()`](@/api.md#process) | Processes the given element and its children, hooking up any htmx behavior | [`htmx.remove()`](@/api.md#remove) | Removes the given element | [`htmx.removeClass()`](@/api.md#removeClass) | Removes a class from the given element | [`htmx.removeExtension()`](@/api.md#removeExtension) | Removes an htmx [extension](https://extensions.htmx.org) | [`htmx.swap()`](@/api.md#swap) | Performs swapping (and settling) of HTML content | [`htmx.takeClass()`](@/api.md#takeClass) | Takes a class from other elements for the given element | [`htmx.toggleClass()`](@/api.md#toggleClass) | Toggles a class from the given element | [`htmx.trigger()`](@/api.md#trigger) | Triggers an event on an element | [`htmx.values()`](@/api.md#values) | Returns the input values associated with the given element </div> ## Configuration Reference {#config} Htmx has some configuration options that can be accessed either programmatically or declaratively. They are listed below: <div class="info-table"> | Config Variable | Info | |---------------------------------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | `htmx.config.historyEnabled` | defaults to `true`, really only useful for testing | | `htmx.config.historyCacheSize` | defaults to 10 | | `htmx.config.refreshOnHistoryMiss` | defaults to `false`, if set to `true` htmx will issue a full page refresh on history misses rather than use an AJAX request | | `htmx.config.defaultSwapStyle` | defaults to `innerHTML` | | `htmx.config.defaultSwapDelay` | defaults to 0 | | `htmx.config.defaultSettleDelay` | defaults to 20 | | `htmx.config.includeIndicatorStyles` | defaults to `true` (determines if the indicator styles are loaded) | | `htmx.config.indicatorClass` | defaults to `htmx-indicator` | | `htmx.config.requestClass` | defaults to `htmx-request` | | `htmx.config.addedClass` | defaults to `htmx-added` | | `htmx.config.settlingClass` | defaults to `htmx-settling` | | `htmx.config.swappingClass` | defaults to `htmx-swapping` | | `htmx.config.allowEval` | defaults to `true`, can be used to disable htmx's use of eval for certain features (e.g. trigger filters) | | `htmx.config.allowScriptTags` | defaults to `true`, determines if htmx will process script tags found in new content | | `htmx.config.inlineScriptNonce` | defaults to `''`, meaning that no nonce will be added to inline scripts | | `htmx.config.inlineStyleNonce` | defaults to `''`, meaning that no nonce will be added to inline styles | | `htmx.config.attributesToSettle` | defaults to `["class", "style", "width", "height"]`, the attributes to settle during the settling phase | | `htmx.config.wsReconnectDelay` | defaults to `full-jitter` | | `htmx.config.wsBinaryType` | defaults to `blob`, the [the type of binary data](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/API/WebSocket/binaryType) being received over the WebSocket connection | | `htmx.config.disableSelector` | defaults to `[hx-disable], [data-hx-disable]`, htmx will not process elements with this attribute on it or a parent | | `htmx.config.withCredentials` | defaults to `false`, allow cross-site Access-Control requests using credentials such as cookies, authorization headers or TLS client certificates | | `htmx.config.timeout` | defaults to 0, the number of milliseconds a request can take before automatically being terminated | | `htmx.config.scrollBehavior` | defaults to 'instant', the behavior for a boosted link on page transitions. The allowed values are `auto`, `instant` and `smooth`. Instant will scroll instantly in a single jump, smooth will scroll smoothly, while auto will behave like a vanilla link. | | `htmx.config.defaultFocusScroll` | if the focused element should be scrolled into view, defaults to false and can be overridden using the [focus-scroll](@/attributes/hx-swap.md#focus-scroll) swap modifier. | | `htmx.config.getCacheBusterParam` | defaults to false, if set to true htmx will append the target element to the `GET` request in the format `org.htmx.cache-buster=targetElementId` | | `htmx.config.globalViewTransitions` | if set to `true`, htmx will use the [View Transition](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/View_Transitions_API) API when swapping in new content. | | `htmx.config.methodsThatUseUrlParams` | defaults to `["get", "delete"]`, htmx will format requests with these methods by encoding their parameters in the URL, not the request body | | `htmx.config.selfRequestsOnly` | defaults to `true`, whether to only allow AJAX requests to the same domain as the current document | | `htmx.config.ignoreTitle` | defaults to `false`, if set to `true` htmx will not update the title of the document when a `title` tag is found in new content | | `htmx.config.scrollIntoViewOnBoost` | defaults to `true`, whether or not the target of a boosted element is scrolled into the viewport. If `hx-target` is omitted on a boosted element, the target defaults to `body`, causing the page to scroll to the top. | | `htmx.config.triggerSpecsCache` | defaults to `null`, the cache to store evaluated trigger specifications into, improving parsing performance at the cost of more memory usage. You may define a simple object to use a never-clearing cache, or implement your own system using a [proxy object](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Proxy) | | `htmx.config.responseHandling` | the default [Response Handling](@/docs.md#response-handling) behavior for response status codes can be configured here to either swap or error | | `htmx.config.allowNestedOobSwaps` | defaults to `true`, whether to process OOB swaps on elements that are nested within the main response element. See [Nested OOB Swaps](@/attributes/hx-swap-oob.md#nested-oob-swaps). | </div> You can set them directly in javascript, or you can use a `meta` tag: ```html <meta name="htmx-config" content='{"defaultSwapStyle":"outerHTML"}'> ```</doc></docs></project>
xml
llms.txt
Docs: Surreal
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<docs><doc title="Surreal" desc="Tiny jQuery alternative for plain Javascript with inline Locality of Behavior, providing `me` and `any` functions"># 🗿 Surreal ### Tiny jQuery alternative for plain Javascript with inline [Locality of Behavior](https://htmx.org/essays/locality-of-behaviour/)! ![cover](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/24665/171092805-b41286b2-be4a-4aab-9ee6-d604699cc507.png) (Art by [shahabalizadeh](https://www.deviantart.com/shahabalizadeh)) <!-- <a href="https://github.com/gnat/surreal/archive/refs/heads/main.zip"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Download%20.zip-ff9800?style=for-the-badge&color=%234400e5" alt="Download badge" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/gnat/surreal"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/gnat/surreal/ci?label=ci&style=for-the-badge&color=%237d91ce" alt="CI build badge" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/gnat/surreal/releases"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/gnat/surreal/release?label=Mini&style=for-the-badge&color=%237d91ce" alt="Mini build badge" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/gnat/surreal/blob/main/LICENSE"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/license/gnat/surreal?style=for-the-badge&color=%234400e5" alt="License badge" /></a>--> ## Why does this exist? For devs who love ergonomics! You may appreciate Surreal if: * You want to stay as close as possible to Vanilla JS. * Hate typing `document.querySelector` over.. and over.. * Hate typing `addEventListener` over.. and over.. * Really wish `document.querySelectorAll` had Array functions.. * Really wish `this` would work in any inline `<script>` tag * Enjoyed using jQuery selector syntax. * [Animations, timelines, tweens](#-quick-start) with no extra libraries. * Only 320 lines. No build step. No dependencies. * Pairs well with [htmx](https://htmx.org) * Want fewer layers, less complexity. Are aware of the cargo cult. ✈️ ## ✨ What does it add to Javascript? * ⚡️ [Locality of Behavior (LoB)](https://htmx.org/essays/locality-of-behaviour/) Use `me()` inside `<script>` * No **.class** or **#id** needed! Get an element without creating a unique name. * `this` but much more flexible! * Want `me` in your CSS `<style>` tags, too? See our [companion script](https://github.com/gnat/css-scope-inline) * 🔗 Call chaining, jQuery style. * ♻️ Functions work seamlessly on 1 element or arrays of elements! * All functions can use: `me()`, `any()`, `NodeList`, `HTMLElement` (..or arrays of these!) * Get 1 element: `me()` * ..or many elements: `any()` * `me()` or `any()` can chain with any Surreal function. * `me()` can be used directly as a single element (like `querySelector()` or `$()`) * `any()` can use: `for` / `forEach` / `filter` / `map` (like `querySelectorAll()` or `$()`) * 🌗 No forced style. Use: `classAdd` or `class_add` or `addClass` or `add_class` * Use `camelCase` (Javascript) or `snake_case` (Python, Rust, PHP, Ruby, SQL, CSS). ### 🤔 Why use `me()` / `any()` instead of `$()` * 💡 Solves the classic jQuery bloat problem: Am I getting 1 element or an array of elements? * `me()` is guaranteed to return 1 element (or first found, or null). * `any()` is guaranteed to return an array (or empty array). * No more checks = write less code. Bonus: Reads more like self-documenting english. ## 👁️ How does it look? Do surreal things with [Locality of Behavior](https://htmx.org/essays/locality-of-behaviour/) like: ```html <label for="file-input" > <div class="uploader"></div> <script> me().on("dragover", ev => { halt(ev); me(ev).classAdd('.hover'); console.log("Files in drop zone.") }) me().on("dragleave", ev => { halt(ev); me(ev).classRemove('.hover'); console.log("Files left drop zone.") }) me().on("drop", ev => { halt(ev); me(ev).classRemove('.hover').classAdd('.loading'); me('#file-input').attribute('files', ev.dataTransfer.files); me('#form').send('change') }) </script> </label> ``` See the [Live Example](https://gnat.github.io/surreal/example.html)! Then [view source](https://github.com/gnat/surreal/blob/main/example.html). ## 🎁 Install Surreal is only 320 lines. No build step. No dependencies. [📥 Download](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gnat/surreal/main/surreal.js) into your project, and add `<script src="/surreal.js"></script>` in your `<head>` Or, 🌐 via CDN: `<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/surreal/1.3.2/surreal.js"></script>` ## ⚡ Usage ### <a name="selectors"></a>🔍️ DOM Selection * Select **one** element: `me(...)` * Can be any of: * CSS selector: `".button"`, `"#header"`, `"h1"`, `"body > .block"` * Variables: `body`, `e`, `some_element` * Events: `event.currentTarget` will be used. * Surreal selectors: `me()`,`any()` * Choose the start location in the DOM with the 2nd arg. (Default: `document`) * 🔥 `any('button', me('#header')).classAdd('red')` * Add `.red` to any `<button>` inside of `#header` * `me()` ⭐ Get parent element of `<script>` without a **.class** or **#id** ! * `me("body")` Gets `<body>` * `me(".button")` Gets the first `<div class="button">...</div>`. To get all of them use `any()` * Select **one or more** elements as an array: `any(...)` * Like `me()` but guaranteed to return an array (or empty array). * `any(".foo")` ⭐ Get all matching elements. * Convert between arrays of elements and single elements: `any(me())`, `me(any(".something"))` ### 🔥 DOM Functions * ♻️ All functions work on single elements or arrays of elements. * 🔗 Start a chain using `me()` and `any()` * 🟢 Style A `me().classAdd('red')` ⭐ Chain style. Recommended! * 🟠 Style B: `classAdd(me(), 'red')` * 🌐 Global conveniences help you write less code. * `globalsAdd()` will automatically warn you of any clobbering issues! * 💀🩸 If you want no conveniences, or are a masochist, delete `globalsAdd()` * 🟢 `me().classAdd('red')` becomes `surreal.me().classAdd('red')` * 🟠 `classAdd(me(), 'red')` becomes `surreal.classAdd(surreal.me(), 'red')` See: [Quick Start](#quick-start) and [Reference](#reference) and [No Surreal Needed](#no-surreal) ## <a name="quick-start"></a>⚡ Quick Start * Add a class * `me().classAdd('red')` * `any("button").classAdd('red')` * Events * `me().on("click", ev => me(ev).fadeOut() )` * `any('button').on('click', ev => { me(ev).styles('color: red') })` * Run functions over elements. * `any('button').run(_ => { alert(_) })` * Styles / CSS * `me().styles('color: red')` * `me().styles({ 'color':'red', 'background':'blue' })` * Attributes * `me().attribute('active', true)` <a name="timelines"></a> #### Timeline animations without any libraries. ```html <div>I change color every second. <script> // On click, animate something new every second. me().on("click", async ev => { let el = me(ev) // Save target because async will lose it. me(el).styles({ "transition": "background 1s" }) await sleep(1000) me(el).styles({ "background": "red" }) await sleep(1000) me(el).styles({ "background": "green" }) await sleep(1000) me(el).styles({ "background": "blue" }) await sleep(1000) me(el).styles({ "background": "none" }) await sleep(1000) me(el).remove() }) </script> </div> ``` ```html <div>I fade out and remove myself. <script>me().on("click", ev => { me(ev).fadeOut() })</script> </div> ``` ```html <div>Change color every second. <script> // Run immediately. (async (e = me()) => { me(e).styles({ "transition": "background 1s" }) await sleep(1000) me(e).styles({ "background": "red" }) await sleep(1000) me(e).styles({ "background": "green" }) await sleep(1000) me(e).styles({ "background": "blue" }) await sleep(1000) me(e).styles({ "background": "none" }) await sleep(1000) me(e).remove() })() </script> </div> ``` ```html <script> // Run immediately, for every <button> globally! (async () => { any("button").fadeOut() })() </script> ``` #### Array methods ```js any('button')?.forEach(...) any('button')?.map(...) ``` ## <a name="reference"></a>👁️ Functions Looking for [DOM Selectors](#selectors)? Looking for stuff [we recommend doing in vanilla JS](#no-surreal)? ### 🧭 Legend * 🔗 Chainable off `me()` and `any()` * 🌐 Global shortcut. * 🔥 Runnable example. * 🔌 Built-in Plugin ### 👁️ At a glance * 🔗 `run` * It's `forEach` but less wordy and works on single elements, too! * 🔥 `me().run(e => { alert(e) })` * 🔥 `any('button').run(e => { alert(e) })` * 🔗 `remove` * 🔥 `me().remove()` * 🔥 `any('button').remove()` * 🔗 `classAdd` 🌗 `class_add` 🌗 `addClass` 🌗 `add_class` * 🔥 `me().classAdd('active')` * Leading `.` is **optional** * Same thing: `me().classAdd('active')` 🌗 `me().classAdd('.active')` * 🔗 `classRemove` 🌗 `class_remove` 🌗 `removeClass` 🌗 `remove_class` * 🔥 `me().classRemove('active')` * 🔗 `classToggle` 🌗 `class_toggle` 🌗 `toggleClass` 🌗 `toggle_class` * 🔥 `me().classToggle('active')` * 🔗 `styles` * 🔥 `me().styles('color: red')` Add style. * 🔥 `me().styles({ 'color':'red', 'background':'blue' })` Add multiple styles. * 🔥 `me().styles({ 'background':null })` Remove style. * 🔗 `attribute` 🌗 `attributes` 🌗 `attr` * Get: 🔥 `me().attribute('data-x')` * For single elements. * For many elements, wrap it in: `any(...).run(...)` or `any(...).forEach(...)` * Set: 🔥`me().attribute('data-x', true)` * Set multiple: 🔥 `me().attribute({ 'data-x':'yes', 'data-y':'no' })` * Remove: 🔥 `me().attribute('data-x', null)` * Remove multiple: 🔥 `me().attribute({ 'data-x': null, 'data-y':null })` * 🔗 `send` 🌗 `trigger` * 🔥 `me().send('change')` * 🔥 `me().send('change', {'data':'thing'})` * Wraps `dispatchEvent` * 🔗 `on` * 🔥 `me().on('click', ev => { me(ev).styles('background', 'red') })` * Wraps `addEventListener` * 🔗 `off` * 🔥 `me().off('click', fn)` * Wraps `removeEventListener` * 🔗 `offAll` * 🔥 `me().offAll()` * 🔗 `disable` * 🔥 `me().disable()` * Easy alternative to `off()`. Disables click, key, submit events. * 🔗 `enable` * 🔥 `me().enable()` * Opposite of `disable()` * 🌐 `sleep` * 🔥 `await sleep(1000, ev => { alert(ev) })` * `async` version of `setTimeout` * Wonderful for animation timelines. * 🌐 `tick` * 🔥 `await tick()` * `await` version of `rAF` / `requestAnimationFrame`. * Animation tick. Waits 1 frame. * Great if you need to wait for events to propagate. * 🌐 `rAF` * 🔥 `rAF(e => { return e })` * Animation tick. Fires when 1 frame has passed. Alias of [requestAnimationFrame](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/window/requestAnimationFrame) * Great if you need to wait for events to propagate. * 🌐 `rIC` * 🔥 `rIC(e => { return e })` * Great time to compute. Fires function when JS is idle. Alias of [requestIdleCallback](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/requestIdleCallback) * 🌐 `halt` * 🔥 `halt(event)` * Prevent default browser behaviors. * Wrapper for [preventDefault](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Event/preventDefault) * 🌐 `createElement` 🌗 `create_element` * 🔥 `e_new = createElement("div"); me().prepend(e_new)` * Alias of vanilla `document.createElement` * 🌐 `onloadAdd` 🌗 `onload_add` 🌗 `addOnload` 🌗 `add_onload` * 🔥 `onloadAdd(_ => { alert("loaded!"); })` * 🔥 `<script>let e = me(); onloadAdd(_ => { me(e).on("click", ev => { alert("clicked") }) })</script>` * Execute after the DOM is ready. Similar to jquery `ready()` * Add to `window.onload` while preventing overwrites of `window.onload` and predictable loading! * Alternatives: * Skip missing elements using `?.` example: `me("video")?.requestFullscreen()` * Place `<script>` after the loaded element. * See `me('-')` / `me('prev')` * 🔌 `fadeOut` * See below * 🔌 `fadeIn` * See below ### <a name="plugin-included"></a>🔌 Built-in Plugins ### Effects Build effects with `me().styles({...})` with timelines using [CSS transitioned `await` or callbacks](#timelines). Common effects included: * 🔗 `fadeOut` 🌗 `fade_out` * Fade out and remove element. * Keep element with `remove=false`. * 🔥 `me().fadeOut()` * 🔥 `me().fadeOut(ev => { alert("Faded out!") }, 3000)` Over 3 seconds then call function. * 🔗 `fadeIn` 🌗 `fade_in` * Fade in existing element which has `opacity: 0` * 🔥 `me().fadeIn()` * 🔥 `me().fadeIn(ev => { alert("Faded in!") }, 3000)` Over 3 seconds then call function. ## <a name="no-surreal"></a>⚪ No Surreal Needed More often than not, Vanilla JS is the easiest way! Logging * 🔥 `console.log()` `console.warn()` `console.error()` * Event logging: 🔥 `monitorEvents(me())` See: [Chrome Blog](https://developer.chrome.com/blog/quickly-monitor-events-from-the-console-panel-2/) Benchmarking / Time It! * 🔥 `console.time('name')` * 🔥 `console.timeEnd('name')` Text / HTML Content * 🔥 `me().textContent = "hello world"` * XSS Safe! See: [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node/textContent) * 🔥 `me().innerHTML = "<p>hello world</p>"` * 🔥 `me().innerText = "hello world"` Children * 🔥 `me().children` * 🔥 `me().children.hidden = true` Append / Prepend elements. * 🔥 `me().prepend(new_element)` * 🔥 `me().appendChild(new_element)` * 🔥 `me().insertBefore(element, other_element.firstChild)` * 🔥 `me().insertAdjacentHTML("beforebegin", new_element)` AJAX (replace jQuery `ajax()`) * Use [htmx](https://htmx.org/) or [htmz](https://leanrada.com/htmz/) or [fetch()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API) or [XMLHttpRequest()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest) directly. * Using `fetch()` ```js me().on("click", async event => { let e = me(event) // EXAMPLE 1: Hit an endpoint. if((await fetch("/webhook")).ok) console.log("Did the thing.") // EXAMPLE 2: Get content and replace me() try { let response = await fetch('/endpoint') if (response.ok) e.innerHTML = await response.text() else console.warn('fetch(): Bad response') } catch (error) { console.warn(`fetch(): ${error}`) } }) ``` * Using `XMLHttpRequest()` ```js me().on("click", async event => { let e = me(event) // EXAMPLE 1: Hit an endpoint. var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest() xhr.open("GET", "/webhook") xhr.send() // EXAMPLE 2: Get content and replace me() var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest() xhr.open("GET", "/endpoint") xhr.onreadystatechange = () => { if (xhr.readyState == 4 && xhr.status >= 200 && xhr.status < 300) e.innerHTML = xhr.responseText } xhr.send() }) ``` ## 💎 Conventions & Tips * Many ideas can be done in HTML / CSS (ex: dropdowns) * `_` = for temporary or unused variables. Keep it short and sweet! * `e`, `el`, `elt` = element * `e`, `ev`, `evt` = event * `f`, `fn` = function #### Scope functions and variables inside `<script>` * ⭐ Use a block `{ let note = "hi"; function hey(text) { alert(text) }; me().on('click', ev => { hey(note) }) }` * `let` and `function` is scoped within `{ }` * ⭐ Use `me()` * `me().hey = (text) => { alert(text) }` * `me().on('click', (ev) => { me(ev).hey("hi") })` * ⭐ Use an event `me().on('click', ev => { /* add and call function here */ })` * Use an inline module: `<script type="module">` * Note: `me()` in modules will not see `parentElement`, explicit selectors are required: `me(".mybutton")` #### Select a void element like `<input type="text" />` * Use: `me('-')` or `me('prev')` or `me('previous')` * 🔥 `<input type="text" /> <script>me('-').value = "hello"</script>` * Inspired by the CSS "next sibling" combinator `+` but in reverse `-` * Or, use a relative start. * 🔥 `<form> <input type="text" n1 /> <script>me('[n1]', me()).value = "hello"</script> </form>` #### Ignore call chain when element is missing. * 🔥 `me("#i_dont_exist")?.classAdd('active')` * No warnings: 🔥 `me("#i_dont_exist", document, false)?.classAdd('active')` ## <a name="plugins"></a>🔌 Your own plugin Feel free to edit Surreal directly- but if you prefer, you can use plugins to effortlessly merge with new versions. ```javascript function pluginHello(e) { function hello(e, name="World") { console.log(`Hello ${name} from ${e}`) return e // Make chainable. } // Add sugar e.hello = (name) => { return hello(e, name) } } surreal.plugins.push(pluginHello) ``` Now use your function like: `me().hello("Internet")` * See the included `pluginEffects` for a more comprehensive example. * Your functions are added globally by `globalsAdd()` If you do not want this, add it to the `restricted` list. * Refer to an existing function to see how to make yours work with 1 or many elements. Make an [issue](https://github.com/gnat/surreal/issues) or [pull request](https://github.com/gnat/surreal/pulls) if you think people would like to use it! If it's useful enough we'll want it in core. ### ⭐ Awesome Surreal examples, plugins, and resources: [awesome-surreal](https://github.com/gnat/awesome-surreal) ! ## 📚️ Inspired by * [jQuery](https://jquery.com/) for the chainable syntax we all love. * [BlingBling.js](https://github.com/argyleink/blingblingjs) for modern minimalism. * [Bliss.js](https://blissfuljs.com/) for a focus on single elements and extensibility. * [Hyperscript](https://hyperscript.org) for Locality of Behavior and awesome ergonomics. * Shout out to [Umbrella](https://umbrellajs.com/), [Cash](https://github.com/fabiospampinato/cash), [Zepto](https://zeptojs.com/)- Not quite as ergonomic. Requires build step to extend. ## 🌘 Future * Always more `example.html` goodies! * Automated browser testing perhaps with: * [Fava](https://github.com/fabiospampinato/fava). See: https://github.com/avajs/ava/issues/24#issuecomment-885949036 * [Ava](https://github.com/avajs/ava/blob/main/docs/recipes/browser-testing.md) * [jsdom](https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom) * [jsdom notes](https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom#executing-scripts)</doc></docs></project>
xml
llms.txt
Docs: CSS Scope Inline
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<docs><doc title="CSS Scope Inline" desc="A JS library which allow `me` to be used in CSS selectors, by using a `MutationObserver` to monitor the DOM"># 🌘 CSS Scope Inline ![cover](https://github.com/gnat/css-scope-inline/assets/24665/c4935c1b-34e3-4220-9d42-11f064999a57) (Art by [shahabalizadeh](https://www.artstation.com/artwork/zDgdd)) ## Why does this exist? * You want an easy inline vanilla CSS experience without Tailwind CSS. * Hate creating unique class names over.. and over.. to use once. * You want to co-locate your styles for ⚡️ [Locality of Behavior (LoB)](https://htmx.org/essays/locality-of-behaviour/) * You wish `this` would work in `<style>` tags. * Want all CSS features: [Nesting](https://caniuse.com/css-nesting), animations. Get scoped [`@keyframes`](https://github.com/gnat/css-scope-inline/blob/main/example.html#L50)! * You wish `@media` queries were shorter for [responsive design](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/responsive-design). * Only 16 lines. No build step. No dependencies. * Pairs well with [htmx](https://htmx.org) and [Surreal](https://github.com/gnat/surreal) * Want fewer layers, less complexity. Are aware of the cargo cult. ✈️ ✨ Want to also scope your `<script>` tags? See our companion project [Surreal](https://github.com/gnat/surreal) ## 👁️ How does it look? ```html <div> <style> me { background: red; } /* ✨ this & self also work! */ me button { background: blue; } /* style child elements inline! */ </style> <button>I'm blue</button> </div> ``` See the [Live Example](https://gnat.github.io/css-scope-inline/example.html)! Then [view source](https://github.com/gnat/css-scope-inline/blob/main/example.html). ## 🌘 How does it work? This uses `MutationObserver` to monitor the DOM, and the moment a `<style>` tag is seen, it scopes the styles to whatever the parent element is. No flashing or popping. This method also leaves your existing styles untouched, allowing you to mix and match at your leisure. ## 🎁 Install ✂️ copy + 📋 paste the snippet into `<script>` in your `<head>` Or, [📥 download](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gnat/css-scope-inline/main/script.js) into your project, and add `<script src="script.js"></script>` in your `<head>` Or, 🌐 CDN: `<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/gnat/css-scope-inline@main/script.js"></script>` ## 🤔 Why consider this over Tailwind CSS? Use whatever you'd like, but there's a few advantages with this approach over Tailwind, Twind, UnoCSS: * No more [repeating styles](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/reusing-styles) on child elements (..no [@apply](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/reusing-styles#extracting-classes-with-apply), no `[&>thing]` per style). It's just CSS! * No endless visual noise on every `<div>`. Use a local `<style>` per group. * No high risk of eventually requiring a build step. * No chance of [deprecations](https://windicss.org/posts/sunsetting.html). 16 lines is infinitely maintainable. * Get the ultra-fast "inspect, play with styles, paste" workflow back. * No suffering from missing syntax highlighting on properties and units. * No suffering from FOUC (a flash of unstyled content). * Zero friction movement of styles between inline and `.css` files. Just replace `me` * No special tooling or plugins to install. Universal vanilla CSS. ## ⚡ Workflow Tips * Flat, 1 selector per line can be very short like Tailwind. See the examples. * Use just plain CSS variables in your design system. * Use the short `@media` queries for responsive design. * Mobile First (flow: **above** breakpoint): **🟢 None** `sm` `md` `lg` `xl` `xx` 🏁 * Desktop First (flow: **below** breakpoint): 🏁 `xs-` `sm-` `md-` `lg-` `xl-` **🟢 None** * 🟢 = No breakpoint. Default. See the [Live Example](https://gnat.github.io/css-scope-inline/example.html)! * Based on [Tailwind](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/responsive-design) breakpoints. We use `xx` not `2xl` to not break CSS highlighters. * Unlike Tailwind, you can [nest your @media styles](https://developer.chrome.com/articles/css-nesting/#nesting-media)! * Positional selectors may be easier using `div[n1]` for `<div n1>` instead of `div:nth-child(1)` * Try tools like- Auto complete styles: [VSCode](https://code.visualstudio.com/) or [Sublime](https://packagecontrol.io/packages/Emmet) ## 👁️ CSS Scope Inline vs Tailwind CSS Showdowns ### Basics Tailwind verbosity goes up with more child elements. ```html <div> <style> me { background: red; } me div { background: green; } me div[n1] { background: yellow; } me div[n2] { background: blue; } </style> red <div>green</div> <div>green</div> <div>green</div> <div n1>yellow</div> <div n2>blue</div> <div>green</div> <div>green</div> </div> <div class="bg-[red]"> red <div class="bg-[green]">green</div> <div class="bg-[green]">green</div> <div class="bg-[green]">green</div> <div class="bg-[yellow]">yellow</div> <div class="bg-[blue]">blue</div> <div class="bg-[green]">green</div> <div class="bg-[green]">green</div> </div> ``` ### CSS variables and child elements At first glance, **Tailwind Example 2** looks very promising! Exciting ...but: * 🔴 **Every child style requires an explicit selector.** * Tailwinds' shorthand advantages sadly disappear. * Any more child styles added in Tailwind will become longer than vanilla CSS. * This limited example is the best case scenario for Tailwind. * 🔴 Not visible on github: **no highlighting for properties and units** begins to be painful. ```html <!doctype html> <html> <head> <style> :root { --color-1: hsl(0 0% 88%); --color-1-active: hsl(214 20% 70%); } </style> <script src="https://cdn.tailwindcss.com"></script> <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/gnat/css-scope-inline@main/script.js"></script> </head> <body> <!-- CSS Scope Inline --> <div> <style> me { margin:8px 6px; } me div a { display:block; padding:8px 12px; margin:10px 0; background:var(--color-1); border-radius:10px; text-align:center; } me div a:hover { background:var(--color-1-active); color:white; } </style> <div><a href="#">Home</a></div> <div><a href="#">Team</a></div> <div><a href="#">Profile</a></div> <div><a href="#">Settings</a></div> <div><a href="#">Log Out</a></div> </div> <!-- Tailwind Example 1 --> <div class="mx-2 my-4"> <div><a href="#" class="block py-2 px-3 my-2 bg-[--color-1] rounded-lg text-center hover:bg-[--color-1-active] hover:text-white">Home</a></div> <div><a href="#" class="block py-2 px-3 my-2 bg-[--color-1] rounded-lg text-center hover:bg-[--color-1-active] hover:text-white">Team</a></div> <div><a href="#" class="block py-2 px-3 my-2 bg-[--color-1] rounded-lg text-center hover:bg-[--color-1-active] hover:text-white">Profile</a></div> <div><a href="#" class="block py-2 px-3 my-2 bg-[--color-1] rounded-lg text-center hover:bg-[--color-1-active] hover:text-white">Settings</a></div> <div><a href="#" class="block py-2 px-3 my-2 bg-[--color-1] rounded-lg text-center hover:bg-[--color-1-active] hover:text-white">Log Out</a></div> </div> <!-- Tailwind Example 2 --> <div class="mx-2 my-4 [&_div_a]:block [&_div_a]:py-2 [&_div_a]:px-3 [&_div_a]:my-2 [&_div_a]:bg-[--color-1] [&_div_a]:rounded-lg [&_div_a]:text-center [&_div_a:hover]:bg-[--color-1-active] [&_div_a:hover]:text-white"> <div><a href="#">Home</a></div> <div><a href="#">Team</a></div> <div><a href="#">Profile</a></div> <div><a href="#">Settings</a></div> <div><a href="#">Log Out</a></div> </div> </body> </html> ``` ## 🔎 Technical FAQ * Why do you use `querySelectorAll()` and not just process the `MutationObserver` results directly? * This was indeed the original design; it will work well up until you begin recieving subtrees (ex: DOM swaps with [htmx](https://htmx.org), ajax, jquery, etc.) which requires walking all subtree elements to ensure we do not miss a `<style>`. This unfortunately involves re-scanning thousands of repeated elements. This is why `querySelectorAll()` ends up the performance (and simplicity) winner.</doc></docs></project>
xml
llms.txt
Docs: Starlette quick guide
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<docs><doc title="Starlette quick guide" desc="A quick overview of some Starlette features useful to FastHTML devs."># 🌟 Starlette Quick Manual 2020-02-09 Starlette is the ASGI web framework used as the foundation of FastHTML. Listed here are some Starlette features FastHTML developers can use directly, since the `FastHTML` class inherits from the `Starlette` class (but note that FastHTML has its own customised `RouteX` and `RouterX` classes for routing, to handle FT element trees etc). ## Get uploaded file content ``` async def handler(request): inp = await request.form() uploaded_file = inp["filename"] filename = uploaded_file.filename # abc.png content_type = uploaded.content_type # MIME type, e.g. image/png content = await uploaded_file.read() # image content ``` ## Return a customized response (status code and headers) ``` import json from starlette.responses import Response async def handler(request): data = { "name": "Bo" } return Response(json.dumps(data), media_type="application/json") ``` `Response` takes `status_code`, `headers` and `media_type`, so if we want to change a response's status code, we can do: ``` return Response(content, statu_code=404) ``` And customized headers: ``` headers = { "x-extra-key": "value" } return Response(content, status_code=200, headers=headers) ``` ## Redirect ``` from starlette.responses import RedirectResponse async handler(request): # Customize status_code: # 301: permanent redirect # 302: temporary redirect # 303: see others # 307: temporary redirect (default) return RedirectResponse(url=url, status_code=303) ``` ## Request context ### URL Object: `request.url` * Get request full url: `url = str(request.url)` * Get scheme: `request.url.scheme` (http, https, ws, wss) * Get netloc: `request.url.netloc`, e.g.: example.com:8080 * Get path: `request.url.path`, e.g.: /search * Get query string: `request.url.query`, e.g.: kw=hello * Get hostname: `request.url.hostname`, e.g.: example.com * Get port: `request.url.port`, e.g.: 8080 * If using secure scheme: `request.url.is_secure`, True is schme is `https` or `wss` ### Headers: `request.headers` ``` { 'host': 'example.com:8080', 'connection': 'keep-alive', 'cache-control': 'max-age=0', 'sec-ch-ua': 'Google Chrome 80', 'dnt': '1', 'upgrade-insecure-requests': '1', 'user-agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15_3) ...', 'sec-fetch-dest': 'document', 'accept': 'text/html,image/apng,*/*;q=0.8;v=b3;q=0.9', 'sec-origin-policy': '0', 'sec-fetch-site': 'none', 'sec-fetch-mode': 'navigate', 'sec-fetch-user': '?1', 'accept-encoding': 'gzip, deflate, br', 'accept-language': 'en-US,en;q=0.9,zh-CN;q=0.8,zh;q=0.7,zh-TW;q=0.6', 'cookie': 'session=eyJhZG1pbl91c2_KiQ...' } ``` ### Client: `request.client` * `request.client.host`: get client sock IP * `request.client.port`: get client sock port ### Method: `request.method` * `request.method`: GET, POST, etc. ### Get Data * `await request.body()`: get raw data from body * `await request.json()`: get passed data and parse it as JSON * `await request.form()`: get posted data and pass it as dictionary ### Scope: `request.scope` ``` { 'type': 'http', 'http_version': '1.1', 'server': ('127.0.0.1', 9092), 'client': ('127.0.0.1', 53102), 'scheme': 'https', 'method': 'GET', 'root_path': '', 'path': '/', 'raw_path': b'/', 'query_string': b'kw=hello', 'headers': [ (b'host', b'example.com:8080'), (b'connection', b'keep-alive'), (b'cache-control', b'max-age=0'), ... ], 'app': <starlette.applications.Starlette object at 0x1081bd650>, 'session': {'uid': '57ba03ea7333f72a25f837cf'}, 'router': <starlette.routing.Router object at 0x1081bd6d0>, 'endpoint': <class 'app.index.Index'>, 'path_params': {} } ``` ## Put varaible in request & app scope ``` app.state.dbconn = get_db_conn() request.state.start_time = time.time() # use app-scope state variable in a request request.app.state.dbconn ``` ## Utility functions ### Use `State` to wrap a dictionary ``` from starlette.datastructures import State data = { "name": "Bo" } print(data["name"]) # now wrap it with State function wrapped = State(data) # You can use the dot syntaxt, but can't use `wrapped["name"]` any more. print(wrapped.name) ``` ### login_required wrapper function NB: This is easier to do in FastHTML using Beforeware. ``` import functools from starlette.endpoints import HTTPEndpoint from starlette.responses import Response def login_required(login_url="/signin"): def decorator(handler): @functools.wraps(handler) async def new_handler(obj, req, *args, **kwargs): user = req.session.get("login_user") if user is None: return seeother(login_url) return await handler(obj, req, *args, **kwargs) return new_handler return decorator class MyAccount(HTTPEndpiont): @login_required() async def get(self, request): # some logic here content = "hello" return Response(content) ``` ## Exceptions Handle exception and customize 403, 404, 503, 500 page: ``` from starlette.exceptions import HTTPException async def exc_handle_403(request, exc): return HTMLResponse("My 403 page", status_code=exc.status_code) async def exc_handle_404(request, exc): return HTMLResponse("My 404 page", status_code=exc.status_code) async def exc_handle_503(request, exc): return HTMLResponse("Failed, please try it later", status_code=exc.status_code) # error is not exception, 500 is server side unexpected error, all other status code will be treated as Exception async def err_handle_500(request, exc): import traceback Log.error(traceback.format_exc()) return HTMLResponse("My 500 page", status_code=500) # To add handler, we can add either status_code or Exception itself as key exception_handlers = { 403: exc_handle_403, 404: exc_handle_404, 503: exc_handle_503, 500: err_handle_500, #HTTPException: exc_handle_500, } app = Starlette(routes=routes, exception_handlers=exception_handlers) ``` ## Background Task ### Put some async task as background task ``` import aiofiles from starlette.background import BackgroundTask from starlette.responses import Response aiofiles_remove = aiofiles.os.wrap(os.remove) async def del_file(fpath): await aiofiles_remove(fpath) async def handler(request): content = "" fpath = "/tmp/tmpfile.txt" task = BackgroundTask(del_file, fpath=fpath) return Response(content, background=task) ``` ### Put multiple tasks as background task ``` from starlette.background import BackgroundTasks async def task1(name): pass async def task2(email): pass async def handler(request): tasks = BackgroundTasks() tasks.add_task(task1, name="John") tasks.add_task(task2, email="info@example.com") content = "" return Response(content, background=tasks) ``` ## Write middleware There are 2 ways to write middleware: ### Define `__call__` function: ``` class MyMiddleware: def __init__(self, app): self.app = app async def __call__(self, scope, receive, send): # see above scope dictionary as reference headers = dict(scope["headers"]) # do something # pass to next middleware return await self.app(scope, receive, send) ``` ### Use `BaseHTTPMiddleware` ``` from starlette.middleware.base import BaseHTTPMiddleware class CustomHeaderMiddleware(BaseHTTPMiddleware): async def dispatch(self, request, call_next): # do something before pass to next middleware response = await call_next(request) # do something after next middleware returned response.headers['X-Author'] = 'John' return response ```</doc></docs></project>
xml
llms.txt
API: API List
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<api><doc title="API List" desc="A succint list of all functions and methods in fasthtml."># fasthtml Module Documentation ## fasthtml.authmw - `class BasicAuthMiddleware` - `def __init__(self, app, cb, skip)` - `def __call__(self, scope, receive, send)` - `def authenticate(self, conn)` ## fasthtml.cli - `@call_parse def railway_link()` Link the current directory to the current project's Railway service - `@call_parse def railway_deploy(name, mount)` Deploy a FastHTML app to Railway ## fasthtml.components > `ft_html` and `ft_hx` functions to add some conveniences to `ft`, along with a full set of basic HTML components, and functions to work with forms and `FT` conversion - `def show(ft, *rest)` Renders FT Components into HTML within a Jupyter notebook. - `def File(fname)` Use the unescaped text in file `fname` directly - `def fill_form(form, obj)` Fills named items in `form` using attributes in `obj` - `def fill_dataclass(src, dest)` Modifies dataclass in-place and returns it - `def find_inputs(e, tags, **kw)` Recursively find all elements in `e` with `tags` and attrs matching `kw` - `def html2ft(html, attr1st)` Convert HTML to an `ft` expression - `def sse_message(elm, event)` Convert element `elm` into a format suitable for SSE streaming ## fasthtml.core > The `FastHTML` subclass of `Starlette`, along with the `RouterX` and `RouteX` classes it automatically uses. - `def parsed_date(s)` Convert `s` to a datetime - `def snake2hyphens(s)` Convert `s` from snake case to hyphenated and capitalised - `@dataclass class HtmxHeaders` - `def __bool__(self)` - `def __init__(self, boosted, current_url, history_restore_request, prompt, request, target, trigger_name, trigger)` - `def str2int(s)` Convert `s` to an `int` - `def str2date(s)` `date.fromisoformat` with empty string handling - `@dataclass class HttpHeader` - `def __init__(self, k, v)` - `@use_kwargs_dict(**htmx_resps) def HtmxResponseHeaders(**kwargs)` HTMX response headers - `def form2dict(form)` Convert starlette form data to a dict - `def parse_form(req)` Starlette errors on empty multipart forms, so this checks for that situation - `def flat_xt(lst)` Flatten lists - `class Beforeware` - `def __init__(self, f, skip)` - `def EventStream(s)` Create a text/event-stream response from `s` - `class WS_RouteX` - `def __init__(self, app, path, recv, conn, disconn)` - `def flat_tuple(o)` Flatten lists - `class Redirect` Use HTMX or Starlette RedirectResponse as required to redirect to `loc` - `def __init__(self, loc)` - `def __response__(self, req)` - `class RouteX` - `def __init__(self, app, path, endpoint)` - `class RouterX` - `def __init__(self, app, routes, redirect_slashes, default)` - `def add_route(self, path, endpoint, methods, name, include_in_schema)` - `def add_ws(self, path, recv, conn, disconn, name)` - `class FastHTML` - `def __init__(self, debug, routes, middleware, exception_handlers, on_startup, on_shutdown, lifespan, hdrs, ftrs, before, after, ws_hdr, ct_hdr, surreal, htmx, default_hdrs, sess_cls, secret_key, session_cookie, max_age, sess_path, same_site, sess_https_only, sess_domain, key_fname, htmlkw, **bodykw)` - `def ws(self, path, conn, disconn, name)` Add a websocket route at `path` - `@patch def route(self, path, methods, name, include_in_schema)` Add a route at `path` - `def serve(appname, app, host, port, reload, reload_includes, reload_excludes)` Run the app in an async server, with live reload set as the default. - `class Client` A simple httpx ASGI client that doesn't require `async` - `def __init__(self, app, url)` - `def cookie(key, value, max_age, expires, path, domain, secure, httponly, samesite)` Create a 'set-cookie' `HttpHeader` - `@patch def static_route_exts(self, prefix, static_path, exts)` Add a static route at URL path `prefix` with files from `static_path` and `exts` defined by `reg_re_param()` - `@patch def static_route(self, ext, prefix, static_path)` Add a static route at URL path `prefix` with files from `static_path` and single `ext` (including the '.') - `class MiddlewareBase` - `def __call__(self, scope, receive, send)` - `class FtResponse` Wrap an FT response with any Starlette `Response` - `def __init__(self, content, status_code, headers, cls, media_type, background)` - `def __response__(self, req)` ## fasthtml.fastapp > The `fast_app` convenience wrapper - `def fast_app(db_file, render, hdrs, ftrs, tbls, before, middleware, live, debug, routes, exception_handlers, on_startup, on_shutdown, lifespan, default_hdrs, pico, surreal, htmx, ws_hdr, secret_key, key_fname, session_cookie, max_age, sess_path, same_site, sess_https_only, sess_domain, htmlkw, bodykw, reload_attempts, reload_interval, static_path, **kwargs)` Create a FastHTML or FastHTMLWithLiveReload app. ## fasthtml.js > Basic external Javascript lib wrappers - `def light_media(css)` Render light media for day mode views - `def dark_media(css)` Render dark media for nught mode views - `def MarkdownJS(sel)` Implements browser-based markdown rendering. - `def HighlightJS(sel, langs, light, dark)` Implements browser-based syntax highlighting. Usage example [here](/tutorials/quickstart_for_web_devs.html#code-highlighting). ## fasthtml.live_reload - `class FastHTMLWithLiveReload` `FastHTMLWithLiveReload` enables live reloading. This means that any code changes saved on the server will automatically trigger a reload of both the server and browser window. How does it work? - a websocket is created at `/live-reload` - a small js snippet `LIVE_RELOAD_SCRIPT` is injected into each webpage - this snippet connects to the websocket at `/live-reload` and listens for an `onclose` event - when the `onclose` event is detected the browser is reloaded Why do we listen for an `onclose` event? When code changes are saved the server automatically reloads if the --reload flag is set. The server reload kills the websocket connection. The `onclose` event serves as a proxy for "developer has saved some changes". Usage >>> from fasthtml.common import * >>> app = FastHTMLWithLiveReload() Run: run_uv() - `def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs)` ## fasthtml.oauth > Basic scaffolding for handling OAuth - `class GoogleAppClient` A `WebApplicationClient` for Google oauth2 - `def __init__(self, client_id, client_secret, code, scope, **kwargs)` - `@classmethod def from_file(cls, fname, code, scope, **kwargs)` - `class GitHubAppClient` A `WebApplicationClient` for GitHub oauth2 - `def __init__(self, client_id, client_secret, code, scope, **kwargs)` - `class HuggingFaceClient` A `WebApplicationClient` for HuggingFace oauth2 - `def __init__(self, client_id, client_secret, code, scope, state, **kwargs)` - `class DiscordAppClient` A `WebApplicationClient` for Discord oauth2 - `def __init__(self, client_id, client_secret, is_user, perms, scope, **kwargs)` - `def login_link(self)` - `def parse_response(self, code)` - `@patch def login_link(self, redirect_uri, scope, state)` Get a login link for this client - `@patch def parse_response(self, code, redirect_uri)` Get the token from the oauth2 server response - `@patch def get_info(self, token)` Get the info for authenticated user - `@patch def retr_info(self, code, redirect_uri)` Combines `parse_response` and `get_info` - `@patch def retr_id(self, code, redirect_uri)` Call `retr_info` and then return id/subscriber value - `class OAuth` - `def __init__(self, app, cli, skip, redir_path, logout_path, login_path)` - `def redir_url(self, req)` - `def login_link(self, req, scope, state)` - `def login(self, info, state)` - `def logout(self, session)` - `def chk_auth(self, info, ident, session)` ## fasthtml.pico > Basic components for generating Pico CSS tags - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Card(*c, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Card, implemented as an Article with optional Header and Footer - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Group(*c, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Group, implemented as a Fieldset with role 'group' - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Search(*c, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Search, implemented as a Form with role 'search' - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Grid(*c, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Grid, implemented as child Divs in a Div with class 'grid' - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def DialogX(*c, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Dialog, with children inside a Card - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Container(*args, **kwargs)` A PicoCSS Container, implemented as a Main with class 'container' ## fasthtml.svg > Simple SVG FT elements - `def Svg(*args, **kwargs)` An SVG tag; xmlns is added automatically, and viewBox defaults to height and width if not provided - `@delegates(ft_hx) def ft_svg(tag, *c, **kwargs)` Create a standard `FT` element with some SVG-specific attrs - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Rect(width, height, x, y, fill, stroke, stroke_width, rx, ry, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `rect` element - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Circle(r, cx, cy, fill, stroke, stroke_width, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `circle` element - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Ellipse(rx, ry, cx, cy, fill, stroke, stroke_width, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `ellipse` element - `def transformd(translate, scale, rotate, skewX, skewY, matrix)` Create an SVG `transform` kwarg dict - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Line(x1, y1, x2, y2, stroke, w, stroke_width, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `line` element - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Polyline(*args, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `polyline` element - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Polygon(*args, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `polygon` element - `@delegates(ft_svg) def Text(*args, **kwargs)` A standard SVG `text` element - `class PathFT` - `def M(self, x, y)` Move to. - `def L(self, x, y)` Line to. - `def H(self, x)` Horizontal line to. - `def V(self, y)` Vertical line to. - `def Z(self)` Close path. - `def C(self, x1, y1, x2, y2, x, y)` Cubic Bézier curve. - `def S(self, x2, y2, x, y)` Smooth cubic Bézier curve. - `def Q(self, x1, y1, x, y)` Quadratic Bézier curve. - `def T(self, x, y)` Smooth quadratic Bézier curve. - `def A(self, rx, ry, x_axis_rotation, large_arc_flag, sweep_flag, x, y)` Elliptical Arc. - `def SvgOob(*args, **kwargs)` Wraps an SVG shape as required for an HTMX OOB swap - `def SvgInb(*args, **kwargs)` Wraps an SVG shape as required for an HTMX inband swap ## fasthtml.xtend > Simple extensions to standard HTML components, such as adding sensible defaults - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def A(*c, **kwargs)` An A tag; `href` defaults to '#' for more concise use with HTMX - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def AX(txt, hx_get, target_id, hx_swap, href, **kwargs)` An A tag with just one text child, allowing hx_get, target_id, and hx_swap to be positional params - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Form(*c, **kwargs)` A Form tag; identical to plain `ft_hx` version except default `enctype='multipart/form-data'` - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Hidden(value, id, **kwargs)` An Input of type 'hidden' - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def CheckboxX(checked, label, value, id, name, **kwargs)` A Checkbox optionally inside a Label, preceded by a `Hidden` with matching name - `@delegates(ft_html, keep=True) def Script(code, **kwargs)` A Script tag that doesn't escape its code - `@delegates(ft_html, keep=True) def Style(*c, **kwargs)` A Style tag that doesn't escape its code - `def double_braces(s)` Convert single braces to double braces if next to special chars or newline - `def undouble_braces(s)` Convert double braces to single braces if next to special chars or newline - `def loose_format(s, **kw)` String format `s` using `kw`, without being strict about braces outside of template params - `def ScriptX(fname, src, nomodule, type, _async, defer, charset, crossorigin, integrity, **kw)` A `script` element with contents read from `fname` - `def replace_css_vars(css, pre, **kwargs)` Replace `var(--)` CSS variables with `kwargs` if name prefix matches `pre` - `def StyleX(fname, **kw)` A `style` element with contents read from `fname` and variables replaced from `kw` - `def Surreal(code)` Wrap `code` in `domReadyExecute` and set `m=me()` and `p=me('-')` - `def On(code, event, sel, me)` An async surreal.js script block event handler for `event` on selector `sel,p`, making available parent `p`, event `ev`, and target `e` - `def Prev(code, event)` An async surreal.js script block event handler for `event` on previous sibling, with same vars as `On` - `def Now(code, sel)` An async surreal.js script block on selector `me(sel)` - `def AnyNow(sel, code)` An async surreal.js script block on selector `any(sel)` - `def run_js(js, id, **kw)` Run `js` script, auto-generating `id` based on name of caller if needed, and js-escaping any `kw` params - `def jsd(org, repo, root, path, prov, typ, ver, esm, **kwargs)` jsdelivr `Script` or CSS `Link` tag, or URL - `@delegates(ft_hx, keep=True) def Titled(title, *args, **kwargs)` An HTML partial containing a `Title`, and `H1`, and any provided children - `def Socials(title, site_name, description, image, url, w, h, twitter_site, creator, card)` OG and Twitter social card headers - `def Favicon(light_icon, dark_icon)` Light and dark favicon headers </doc></api></project>
xml
llms.txt
Examples: Websockets application
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<examples><doc title="Websockets application" desc="Very brief example of using websockets with HTMX and FastHTML">from asyncio import sleep from fasthtml.common import * app = FastHTML(ws_hdr=True) rt = app.route def mk_inp(): return Input(id='msg') nid = 'notifications' @rt('/') async def get(): cts = Div( Div(id=nid), Form(mk_inp(), id='form', ws_send=True), hx_ext='ws', ws_connect='/ws') return Titled('Websocket Test', cts) async def on_connect(send): await send(Div('Hello, you have connected', id=nid)) async def on_disconnect( ): print('Disconnected!') @app.ws('/ws', conn=on_connect, disconn=on_disconnect) async def ws(msg:str, send): await send(Div('Hello ' + msg, id=nid)) await sleep(2) return Div('Goodbye ' + msg, id=nid), mk_inp() serve() </doc></examples></project>
xml
llms.txt
Examples: Todo list application
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<examples><doc title="Todo list application" desc="Detailed walk-thru of a complete CRUD app in FastHTML showing idiomatic use of FastHTML and HTMX patterns.">### # Walkthrough of an idiomatic fasthtml app ### # This fasthtml app includes functionality from fastcore, starlette, fastlite, and fasthtml itself. # Run with: `python adv_app.py` # Importing from `fasthtml.common` brings the key parts of all of these together. # For simplicity, you can just `from fasthtml.common import *`: from fasthtml.common import * # ...or you can import everything into a namespace: # from fasthtml import common as fh # ...or you can import each symbol explicitly (which we're commenting out here but including for completeness): """ from fasthtml.common import ( # These are the HTML components we use in this app A, AX, Button, Card, CheckboxX, Container, Div, Form, Grid, Group, H1, H2, Hidden, Input, Li, Main, Script, Style, Textarea, Title, Titled, Ul, # These are FastHTML symbols we'll use Beforeware, FastHTML, fast_app, SortableJS, fill_form, picolink, serve, # These are from Starlette, Fastlite, fastcore, and the Python stdlib FileResponse, NotFoundError, RedirectResponse, database, patch, dataclass ) """ from hmac import compare_digest # You can use any database you want; it'll be easier if you pick a lib that supports the MiniDataAPI spec. # Here we are using SQLite, with the FastLite library, which supports the MiniDataAPI spec. db = database('data/utodos.db') # The `t` attribute is the table collection. The `todos` and `users` tables are not created if they don't exist. # Instead, you can use the `create` method to create them if needed. todos,users = db.t.todos,db.t.users if todos not in db.t: # You can pass a dict, or kwargs, to most MiniDataAPI methods. users.create(dict(name=str, pwd=str), pk='name') todos.create(id=int, title=str, done=bool, name=str, details=str, priority=int, pk='id') # Although you can just use dicts, it can be helpful to have types for your DB objects. # The `dataclass` method creates that type, and stores it in the object, so it will use it for any returned items. Todo,User = todos.dataclass(),users.dataclass() # Any Starlette response class can be returned by a FastHTML route handler. # In that case, FastHTML won't change it at all. # Status code 303 is a redirect that can change POST to GET, so it's appropriate for a login page. login_redir = RedirectResponse('/login', status_code=303) # The `before` function is a *Beforeware* function. These are functions that run before a route handler is called. def before(req, sess): # This sets the `auth` attribute in the request scope, and gets it from the session. # The session is a Starlette session, which is a dict-like object which is cryptographically signed, # so it can't be tampered with. # The `auth` key in the scope is automatically provided to any handler which requests it, and can not # be injected by the user using query params, cookies, etc, so it should be secure to use. auth = req.scope['auth'] = sess.get('auth', None) # If the session key is not there, it redirects to the login page. if not auth: return login_redir # `xtra` is part of the MiniDataAPI spec. It adds a filter to queries and DDL statements, # to ensure that the user can only see/edit their own todos. todos.xtra(name=auth) markdown_js = """ import { marked } from "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/marked/lib/marked.esm.js"; import { proc_htmx} from "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/answerdotai/fasthtml-js/fasthtml.js"; proc_htmx('.markdown', e => e.innerHTML = marked.parse(e.textContent)); """ # We will use this in our `exception_handlers` dict def _not_found(req, exc): return Titled('Oh no!', Div('We could not find that page :(')) # To create a Beforeware object, we pass the function itself, and optionally a list of regexes to skip. bware = Beforeware(before, skip=[r'/favicon\.ico', r'/static/.*', r'.*\.css', '/login']) # The `FastHTML` class is a subclass of `Starlette`, so you can use any parameters that `Starlette` accepts. # In addition, you can add your Beforeware here, and any headers you want included in HTML responses. # FastHTML includes the "HTMX" and "Surreal" libraries in headers, unless you pass `default_hdrs=False`. app = FastHTML(before=bware, # These are the same as Starlette exception_handlers, except they also support `FT` results exception_handlers={404: _not_found}, # PicoCSS is a particularly simple CSS framework, with some basic integration built in to FastHTML. # `picolink` is pre-defined with the header for the PicoCSS stylesheet. # You can use any CSS framework you want, or none at all. hdrs=(picolink, # `Style` is an `FT` object, which are 3-element lists consisting of: # (tag_name, children_list, attrs_dict). # FastHTML composes them from trees and auto-converts them to HTML when needed. # You can also use plain HTML strings in handlers and headers, # which will be auto-escaped, unless you use `NotStr(...string...)`. Style(':root { --pico-font-size: 100%; }'), # Have a look at fasthtml/js.py to see how these Javascript libraries are added to FastHTML. # They are only 5-10 lines of code each, and you can add your own too. SortableJS('.sortable'), # MarkdownJS is actually provided as part of FastHTML, but we've included the js code here # so that you can see how it works. Script(markdown_js, type='module')) ) # We add `rt` as a shortcut for `app.route`, which is what we'll use to decorate our route handlers. # When using `app.route` (or this shortcut), the only required argument is the path. # The name of the decorated function (eg `get`, `post`, etc) is used as the HTTP verb for the handler. rt = app.route # For instance, this function handles GET requests to the `/login` path. @rt("/login") def get(): # This creates a form with two input fields, and a submit button. # All of these components are `FT` objects. All HTML tags are provided in this form by FastHTML. # If you want other custom tags (e.g. `MyTag`), they can be auto-generated by e.g # `from fasthtml.components import MyTag`. # Alternatively, manually call e.g `ft(tag_name, *children, **attrs)`. frm = Form( # Tags with a `name` attr will have `name` auto-set to the same as `id` if not provided Input(id='name', placeholder='Name'), Input(id='pwd', type='password', placeholder='Password'), Button('login'), action='/login', method='post') # If a user visits the URL directly, FastHTML auto-generates a full HTML page. # However, if the URL is accessed by HTMX, then one HTML partial is created for each element of the tuple. # To avoid this auto-generation of a full page, return a `HTML` object, or a Starlette `Response`. # `Titled` returns a tuple of a `Title` with the first arg and a `Container` with the rest. # See the comments for `Title` later for details. return Titled("Login", frm) # Handlers are passed whatever information they "request" in the URL, as keyword arguments. # Dataclasses, dicts, namedtuples, TypedDicts, and custom classes are automatically instantiated # from form data. # In this case, the `Login` class is a dataclass, so the handler will be passed `name` and `pwd`. @dataclass class Login: name:str; pwd:str # This handler is called when a POST request is made to the `/login` path. # The `login` argument is an instance of the `Login` class, which has been auto-instantiated from the form data. # There are a number of special parameter names, which will be passed useful information about the request: # `session`: the Starlette session; `request`: the Starlette request; `auth`: the value of `scope['auth']`, # `htmx`: the HTMX headers, if any; `app`: the FastHTML app object. # You can also pass any string prefix of `request` or `session`. @rt("/login") def post(login:Login, sess): if not login.name or not login.pwd: return login_redir # Indexing into a MiniDataAPI table queries by primary key, which is `name` here. # It returns a dataclass object, if `dataclass()` has been called at some point, or a dict otherwise. try: u = users[login.name] # If the primary key does not exist, the method raises a `NotFoundError`. # Here we use this to just generate a user -- in practice you'd probably to redirect to a signup page. except NotFoundError: u = users.insert(login) # This compares the passwords using a constant time string comparison # https://sqreen.github.io/DevelopersSecurityBestPractices/timing-attack/python if not compare_digest(u.pwd.encode("utf-8"), login.pwd.encode("utf-8")): return login_redir # Because the session is signed, we can securely add information to it. It's stored in the browser cookies. # If you don't pass a secret signing key to `FastHTML`, it will auto-generate one and store it in a file `./sesskey`. sess['auth'] = u.name return RedirectResponse('/', status_code=303) # Instead of using `app.route` (or the `rt` shortcut), you can also use `app.get`, `app.post`, etc. # In this case, the function name is not used to determine the HTTP verb. @app.get("/logout") def logout(sess): del sess['auth'] return login_redir # FastHTML uses Starlette's path syntax, and adds a `static` type which matches standard static file extensions. # You can define your own regex path specifiers -- for instance this is how `static` is defined in FastHTML # `reg_re_param("static", "ico|gif|jpg|jpeg|webm|css|js|woff|png|svg|mp4|webp|ttf|otf|eot|woff2|txt|xml|html")` # In this app, we only actually have one static file, which is `favicon.ico`. But it would also be needed if # we were referencing images, CSS/JS files, etc. # Note, this function is unnecessary, as the `fast_app()` call already includes this functionality. # However, it's included here to show how you can define your own static file handler. @rt("/{fname:path}.{ext:static}") def get(fname:str, ext:str): return FileResponse(f'{fname}.{ext}') # The `patch` decorator, which is defined in `fastcore`, adds a method to an existing class. # Here we are adding a method to the `Todo` class, which is returned by the `todos` table. # The `__ft__` method is a special method that FastHTML uses to convert the object into an `FT` object, # so that it can be composed into an FT tree, and later rendered into HTML. @patch def __ft__(self:Todo): # Some FastHTML tags have an 'X' suffix, which means they're "extended" in some way. # For instance, here `AX` is an extended `A` tag, which takes 3 positional arguments: # `(text, hx_get, target_id)`. # All underscores in FT attrs are replaced with hyphens, so this will create an `hx-get` attr, # which HTMX uses to trigger a GET request. # Generally, most of your route handlers in practice (as in this demo app) are likely to be HTMX handlers. # For instance, for this demo, we only have two full-page handlers: the '/login' and '/' GET handlers. show = AX(self.title, f'/todos/{self.id}', 'current-todo') edit = AX('edit', f'/edit/{self.id}' , 'current-todo') dt = '✅ ' if self.done else '' # FastHTML provides some shortcuts. For instance, `Hidden` is defined as simply: # `return Input(type="hidden", value=value, **kwargs)` cts = (dt, show, ' | ', edit, Hidden(id="id", value=self.id), Hidden(id="priority", value="0")) # Any FT object can take a list of children as positional args, and a dict of attrs as keyword args. return Li(*cts, id=f'todo-{self.id}') # This is the handler for the main todo list application. # By including the `auth` parameter, it gets passed the current username, for displaying in the title. @rt("/") def get(auth): title = f"{auth}'s Todo list" top = Grid(H1(title), Div(A('logout', href='/logout'), style='text-align: right')) # We don't normally need separate "screens" for adding or editing data. Here for instance, # we're using an `hx-post` to add a new todo, which is added to the start of the list (using 'afterbegin'). new_inp = Input(id="new-title", name="title", placeholder="New Todo") add = Form(Group(new_inp, Button("Add")), hx_post="/", target_id='todo-list', hx_swap="afterbegin") # In the MiniDataAPI spec, treating a table as a callable (i.e with `todos(...)` here) queries the table. # Because we called `xtra` in our Beforeware, this queries the todos for the current user only. # We can include the todo objects directly as children of the `Form`, because the `Todo` class has `__ft__` defined. # This is automatically called by FastHTML to convert the `Todo` objects into `FT` objects when needed. # The reason we put the todo list inside a form is so that we can use the 'sortable' js library to reorder them. # That library calls the js `end` event when dragging is complete, so our trigger here causes our `/reorder` # handler to be called. frm = Form(*todos(order_by='priority'), id='todo-list', cls='sortable', hx_post="/reorder", hx_trigger="end") # We create an empty 'current-todo' Div at the bottom of our page, as a target for the details and editing views. card = Card(Ul(frm), header=add, footer=Div(id='current-todo')) # PicoCSS uses `<Main class='container'>` page content; `Container` is a tiny function that generates that. # A handler can return either a single `FT` object or string, or a tuple of them. # In the case of a tuple, the stringified objects are concatenated and returned to the browser. # The `Title` tag has a special purpose: it sets the title of the page. return Title(title), Container(top, card) # This is the handler for the reordering of todos. # It's a POST request, which is used by the 'sortable' js library. # Because the todo list form created earlier included hidden inputs with the todo IDs, # they are passed as form data. By using a parameter called (e.g) "id", FastHTML will try to find # something suitable in the request with this name. In order, it searches as follows: # path; query; cookies; headers; session keys; form data. # Although all these are provided in the request as strings, FastHTML will use your parameter's type # annotation to try to cast the value to the requested type. # In the case of form data, there can be multiple values with the same key. So in this case, # the parameter is a list of ints. @rt("/reorder") def post(id:list[int]): for i,id_ in enumerate(id): todos.update({'priority':i}, id_) # HTMX by default replaces the inner HTML of the calling element, which in this case is the todo list form. # Therefore, we return the list of todos, now in the correct order, which will be auto-converted to FT for us. # In this case, it's not strictly necessary, because sortable.js has already reorder the DOM elements. # However, by returning the updated data, we can be assured that there aren't sync issues between the DOM # and the server. return tuple(todos(order_by='priority')) # Refactoring components in FastHTML is as simple as creating Python functions. # The `clr_details` function creates a Div with specific HTMX attributes. # `hx_swap_oob='innerHTML'` tells HTMX to swap the inner HTML of the target element out-of-band, # meaning it will update this element regardless of where the HTMX request originated from. def clr_details(): return Div(hx_swap_oob='innerHTML', id='current-todo') # This route handler uses a path parameter `{id}` which is automatically parsed and passed as an int. @rt("/todos/{id}") def delete(id:int): # The `delete` method is part of the MiniDataAPI spec, removing the item with the given primary key. todos.delete(id) # Returning `clr_details()` ensures the details view is cleared after deletion, # leveraging HTMX's out-of-band swap feature. # Note that we are not returning *any* FT component that doesn't have an "OOB" swap, so the target element # inner HTML is simply deleted. That's why the deleted todo is removed from the list. return clr_details() @rt("/edit/{id}") def get(id:int): # The `hx_put` attribute tells HTMX to send a PUT request when the form is submitted. # `target_id` specifies which element will be updated with the server's response. res = Form(Group(Input(id="title"), Button("Save")), Hidden(id="id"), CheckboxX(id="done", label='Done'), Textarea(id="details", name="details", rows=10), hx_put="/", target_id=f'todo-{id}', id="edit") # `fill_form` populates the form with existing todo data, and returns the result. # Indexing into a table (`todos`) queries by primary key, which is `id` here. It also includes # `xtra`, so this will only return the id if it belongs to the current user. return fill_form(res, todos[id]) @rt("/") def put(todo: Todo): # `update` is part of the MiniDataAPI spec. # Note that the updated todo is returned. By returning the updated todo, we can update the list directly. # Because we return a tuple with `clr_details()`, the details view is also cleared. return todos.update(todo), clr_details() @rt("/") def post(todo:Todo): # `hx_swap_oob='true'` tells HTMX to perform an out-of-band swap, updating this element wherever it appears. # This is used to clear the input field after adding the new todo. new_inp = Input(id="new-title", name="title", placeholder="New Todo", hx_swap_oob='true') # `insert` returns the inserted todo, which is appended to the start of the list, because we used # `hx_swap='afterbegin'` when creating the todo list form. return todos.insert(todo), new_inp @rt("/todos/{id}") def get(id:int): todo = todos[id] # `hx_swap` determines how the update should occur. We use "outerHTML" to replace the entire todo `Li` element. btn = Button('delete', hx_delete=f'/todos/{todo.id}', target_id=f'todo-{todo.id}', hx_swap="outerHTML") # The "markdown" class is used here because that's the CSS selector we used in the JS earlier. # Therefore this will trigger the JS to parse the markdown in the details field. # Because `class` is a reserved keyword in Python, we use `cls` instead, which FastHTML auto-converts. return Div(H2(todo.title), Div(todo.details, cls="markdown"), btn) serve()</doc></examples></project>
xml
llms.txt
Optional: Starlette full documentation
<project title="FastHTML" summary='FastHTML is a python library which brings together Starlette, Uvicorn, HTMX, and fastcore&#39;s `FT` "FastTags" into a library for creating server-rendered hypermedia applications. The `FastHTML` class itself inherits from `Starlette`, and adds decorator-based routing with many additions, Beforeware, automatic `FT` to HTML rendering, and much more.'>Things to remember when writing FastHTML apps: - Although parts of its API are inspired by FastAPI, it is *not* compatible with FastAPI syntax and is not targeted at creating API services - FastHTML includes support for Pico CSS and the fastlite sqlite library, although using both are optional; sqlalchemy can be used directly or via the fastsql library, and any CSS framework can be used. Support for the Surreal and css-scope-inline libraries are also included, but both are optional - FastHTML is compatible with JS-native web components and any vanilla JS library, but not with React, Vue, or Svelte - Use `serve()` for running uvicorn (`if __name__ == "__main__"` is not needed since it's automatic) - When a title is needed with a response, use `Titled`; note that that already wraps children in `Container`, and already includes both the meta title as well as the H1 element.<optional><doc title="Starlette full documentation" desc="A subset of the Starlette documentation useful for FastHTML development."># index.md --- # Starlette Introduction Starlette is a lightweight [ASGI][asgi] framework/toolkit, which is ideal for building async web services in Python. It is production-ready, and gives you the following: * A lightweight, low-complexity HTTP web framework. * WebSocket support. * In-process background tasks. * Startup and shutdown events. * Test client built on `httpx`. * CORS, GZip, Static Files, Streaming responses. * Session and Cookie support. * 100% test coverage. * 100% type annotated codebase. * Few hard dependencies. * Compatible with `asyncio` and `trio` backends. * Great overall performance [against independent benchmarks][techempower]. ## Requirements Python 3.8+ ## Installation ```shell $ pip3 install starlette ``` You'll also want to install an ASGI server, such as [uvicorn](http://www.uvicorn.org/), [daphne](https://github.com/django/daphne/), or [hypercorn](https://pgjones.gitlab.io/hypercorn/). ```shell $ pip3 install uvicorn ``` ## Example **example.py**: ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import JSONResponse from starlette.routing import Route async def homepage(request): return JSONResponse({'hello': 'world'}) app = Starlette(debug=True, routes=[ Route('/', homepage), ]) ``` Then run the application... ```shell $ uvicorn example:app ``` For a more complete example, [see here](https://github.com/encode/starlette-example). ## Dependencies Starlette only requires `anyio`, and the following dependencies are optional: * [`httpx`][httpx] - Required if you want to use the `TestClient`. * [`jinja2`][jinja2] - Required if you want to use `Jinja2Templates`. * [`python-multipart`][python-multipart] - Required if you want to support form parsing, with `request.form()`. * [`itsdangerous`][itsdangerous] - Required for `SessionMiddleware` support. * [`pyyaml`][pyyaml] - Required for `SchemaGenerator` support. You can install all of these with `pip3 install starlette[full]`. ## Framework or Toolkit Starlette is designed to be used either as a complete framework, or as an ASGI toolkit. You can use any of its components independently. ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` Run the `app` application in `example.py`: ```shell $ uvicorn example:app INFO: Started server process [11509] INFO: Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit) ``` Run uvicorn with `--reload` to enable auto-reloading on code changes. ## Modularity The modularity that Starlette is designed on promotes building re-usable components that can be shared between any ASGI framework. This should enable an ecosystem of shared middleware and mountable applications. The clean API separation also means it's easier to understand each component in isolation. --- # applications.md Starlette includes an application class `Starlette` that nicely ties together all of its other functionality. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.routing import Route, Mount, WebSocketRoute from starlette.staticfiles import StaticFiles def homepage(request): return PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') def user_me(request): username = "John Doe" return PlainTextResponse('Hello, %s!' % username) def user(request): username = request.path_params['username'] return PlainTextResponse('Hello, %s!' % username) async def websocket_endpoint(websocket): await websocket.accept() await websocket.send_text('Hello, websocket!') await websocket.close() def startup(): print('Ready to go') routes = [ Route('/', homepage), Route('/user/me', user_me), Route('/user/{username}', user), WebSocketRoute('/ws', websocket_endpoint), Mount('/static', StaticFiles(directory="static")), ] app = Starlette(debug=True, routes=routes, on_startup=[startup]) ``` ### Instantiating the application ::: starlette.applications.Starlette :docstring: ### Storing state on the app instance You can store arbitrary extra state on the application instance, using the generic `app.state` attribute. For example: ```python app.state.ADMIN_EMAIL = 'admin@example.org' ``` ### Accessing the app instance Where a `request` is available (i.e. endpoints and middleware), the app is available on `request.app`. # requests.md Starlette includes a `Request` class that gives you a nicer interface onto the incoming request, rather than accessing the ASGI scope and receive channel directly. ### Request Signature: `Request(scope, receive=None)` ```python from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import Response async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' request = Request(scope, receive) content = '%s %s' % (request.method, request.url.path) response = Response(content, media_type='text/plain') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` Requests present a mapping interface, so you can use them in the same way as a `scope`. For instance: `request['path']` will return the ASGI path. If you don't need to access the request body you can instantiate a request without providing an argument to `receive`. #### Method The request method is accessed as `request.method`. #### URL The request URL is accessed as `request.url`. The property is a string-like object that exposes all the components that can be parsed out of the URL. For example: `request.url.path`, `request.url.port`, `request.url.scheme`. #### Headers Headers are exposed as an immutable, case-insensitive, multi-dict. For example: `request.headers['content-type']` #### Query Parameters Query parameters are exposed as an immutable multi-dict. For example: `request.query_params['search']` #### Path Parameters Router path parameters are exposed as a dictionary interface. For example: `request.path_params['username']` #### Client Address The client's remote address is exposed as a named two-tuple `request.client` (or `None`). The hostname or IP address: `request.client.host` The port number from which the client is connecting: `request.client.port` #### Cookies Cookies are exposed as a regular dictionary interface. For example: `request.cookies.get('mycookie')` Cookies are ignored in case of an invalid cookie. (RFC2109) #### Body There are a few different interfaces for returning the body of the request: The request body as bytes: `await request.body()` The request body, parsed as form data or multipart: `async with request.form() as form:` The request body, parsed as JSON: `await request.json()` You can also access the request body as a stream, using the `async for` syntax: ```python from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import Response async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' request = Request(scope, receive) body = b'' async for chunk in request.stream(): body += chunk response = Response(body, media_type='text/plain') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` If you access `.stream()` then the byte chunks are provided without storing the entire body to memory. Any subsequent calls to `.body()`, `.form()`, or `.json()` will raise an error. In some cases such as long-polling, or streaming responses you might need to determine if the client has dropped the connection. You can determine this state with `disconnected = await request.is_disconnected()`. #### Request Files Request files are normally sent as multipart form data (`multipart/form-data`). Signature: `request.form(max_files=1000, max_fields=1000)` You can configure the number of maximum fields or files with the parameters `max_files` and `max_fields`: ```python async with request.form(max_files=1000, max_fields=1000): ... ``` !!! info These limits are for security reasons, allowing an unlimited number of fields or files could lead to a denial of service attack by consuming a lot of CPU and memory parsing too many empty fields. When you call `async with request.form() as form` you receive a `starlette.datastructures.FormData` which is an immutable multidict, containing both file uploads and text input. File upload items are represented as instances of `starlette.datastructures.UploadFile`. `UploadFile` has the following attributes: * `filename`: An `str` with the original file name that was uploaded or `None` if its not available (e.g. `myimage.jpg`). * `content_type`: An `str` with the content type (MIME type / media type) or `None` if it's not available (e.g. `image/jpeg`). * `file`: A <a href="https://docs.python.org/3/library/tempfile.html#tempfile.SpooledTemporaryFile" target="_blank">`SpooledTemporaryFile`</a> (a <a href="https://docs.python.org/3/glossary.html#term-file-like-object" target="_blank">file-like</a> object). This is the actual Python file that you can pass directly to other functions or libraries that expect a "file-like" object. * `headers`: A `Headers` object. Often this will only be the `Content-Type` header, but if additional headers were included in the multipart field they will be included here. Note that these headers have no relationship with the headers in `Request.headers`. * `size`: An `int` with uploaded file's size in bytes. This value is calculated from request's contents, making it better choice to find uploaded file's size than `Content-Length` header. `None` if not set. `UploadFile` has the following `async` methods. They all call the corresponding file methods underneath (using the internal `SpooledTemporaryFile`). * `async write(data)`: Writes `data` (`bytes`) to the file. * `async read(size)`: Reads `size` (`int`) bytes of the file. * `async seek(offset)`: Goes to the byte position `offset` (`int`) in the file. * E.g., `await myfile.seek(0)` would go to the start of the file. * `async close()`: Closes the file. As all these methods are `async` methods, you need to "await" them. For example, you can get the file name and the contents with: ```python async with request.form() as form: filename = form["upload_file"].filename contents = await form["upload_file"].read() ``` !!! info As settled in [RFC-7578: 4.2](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc7578.txt), form-data content part that contains file assumed to have `name` and `filename` fields in `Content-Disposition` header: `Content-Disposition: form-data; name="user"; filename="somefile"`. Though `filename` field is optional according to RFC-7578, it helps Starlette to differentiate which data should be treated as file. If `filename` field was supplied, `UploadFile` object will be created to access underlying file, otherwise form-data part will be parsed and available as a raw string. #### Application The originating Starlette application can be accessed via `request.app`. #### Other state If you want to store additional information on the request you can do so using `request.state`. For example: `request.state.time_started = time.time()` # responses.md Starlette includes a few response classes that handle sending back the appropriate ASGI messages on the `send` channel. ### Response Signature: `Response(content, status_code=200, headers=None, media_type=None)` * `content` - A string or bytestring. * `status_code` - An integer HTTP status code. * `headers` - A dictionary of strings. * `media_type` - A string giving the media type. eg. "text/html" Starlette will automatically include a Content-Length header. It will also include a Content-Type header, based on the media_type and appending a charset for text types, unless a charset has already been specified in the `media_type`. Once you've instantiated a response, you can send it by calling it as an ASGI application instance. ```python from starlette.responses import Response async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = Response('Hello, world!', media_type='text/plain') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` #### Set Cookie Starlette provides a `set_cookie` method to allow you to set cookies on the response object. Signature: `Response.set_cookie(key, value, max_age=None, expires=None, path="/", domain=None, secure=False, httponly=False, samesite="lax")` * `key` - A string that will be the cookie's key. * `value` - A string that will be the cookie's value. * `max_age` - An integer that defines the lifetime of the cookie in seconds. A negative integer or a value of `0` will discard the cookie immediately. `Optional` * `expires` - Either an integer that defines the number of seconds until the cookie expires, or a datetime. `Optional` * `path` - A string that specifies the subset of routes to which the cookie will apply. `Optional` * `domain` - A string that specifies the domain for which the cookie is valid. `Optional` * `secure` - A bool indicating that the cookie will only be sent to the server if request is made using SSL and the HTTPS protocol. `Optional` * `httponly` - A bool indicating that the cookie cannot be accessed via JavaScript through `Document.cookie` property, the `XMLHttpRequest` or `Request` APIs. `Optional` * `samesite` - A string that specifies the samesite strategy for the cookie. Valid values are `'lax'`, `'strict'` and `'none'`. Defaults to `'lax'`. `Optional` #### Delete Cookie Conversely, Starlette also provides a `delete_cookie` method to manually expire a set cookie. Signature: `Response.delete_cookie(key, path='/', domain=None)` ### HTMLResponse Takes some text or bytes and returns an HTML response. ```python from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = HTMLResponse('<html><body><h1>Hello, world!</h1></body></html>') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### PlainTextResponse Takes some text or bytes and returns a plain text response. ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### JSONResponse Takes some data and returns an `application/json` encoded response. ```python from starlette.responses import JSONResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = JSONResponse({'hello': 'world'}) await response(scope, receive, send) ``` #### Custom JSON serialization If you need fine-grained control over JSON serialization, you can subclass `JSONResponse` and override the `render` method. For example, if you wanted to use a third-party JSON library such as [orjson](https://pypi.org/project/orjson/): ```python from typing import Any import orjson from starlette.responses import JSONResponse class OrjsonResponse(JSONResponse): def render(self, content: Any) -> bytes: return orjson.dumps(content) ``` In general you *probably* want to stick with `JSONResponse` by default unless you are micro-optimising a particular endpoint or need to serialize non-standard object types. ### RedirectResponse Returns an HTTP redirect. Uses a 307 status code by default. ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse, RedirectResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' if scope['path'] != '/': response = RedirectResponse(url='/') else: response = PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### StreamingResponse Takes an async generator or a normal generator/iterator and streams the response body. ```python from starlette.responses import StreamingResponse import asyncio async def slow_numbers(minimum, maximum): yield '<html><body><ul>' for number in range(minimum, maximum + 1): yield '<li>%d</li>' % number await asyncio.sleep(0.5) yield '</ul></body></html>' async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' generator = slow_numbers(1, 10) response = StreamingResponse(generator, media_type='text/html') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` Have in mind that <a href="https://docs.python.org/3/glossary.html#term-file-like-object" target="_blank">file-like</a> objects (like those created by `open()`) are normal iterators. So, you can return them directly in a `StreamingResponse`. ### FileResponse Asynchronously streams a file as the response. Takes a different set of arguments to instantiate than the other response types: * `path` - The filepath to the file to stream. * `headers` - Any custom headers to include, as a dictionary. * `media_type` - A string giving the media type. If unset, the filename or path will be used to infer a media type. * `filename` - If set, this will be included in the response `Content-Disposition`. * `content_disposition_type` - will be included in the response `Content-Disposition`. Can be set to "attachment" (default) or "inline". File responses will include appropriate `Content-Length`, `Last-Modified` and `ETag` headers. ```python from starlette.responses import FileResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = FileResponse('statics/favicon.ico') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ## Third party responses #### [EventSourceResponse](https://github.com/sysid/sse-starlette) A response class that implements [Server-Sent Events](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/server-sent-events.html). It enables event streaming from the server to the client without the complexity of websockets. #### [baize.asgi.FileResponse](https://baize.aber.sh/asgi#fileresponse) As a smooth replacement for Starlette [`FileResponse`](https://www.starlette.io/responses/#fileresponse), it will automatically handle [Head method](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods/HEAD) and [Range requests](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Range_requests). # websockets.md Starlette includes a `WebSocket` class that fulfils a similar role to the HTTP request, but that allows sending and receiving data on a websocket. ### WebSocket Signature: `WebSocket(scope, receive=None, send=None)` ```python from starlette.websockets import WebSocket async def app(scope, receive, send): websocket = WebSocket(scope=scope, receive=receive, send=send) await websocket.accept() await websocket.send_text('Hello, world!') await websocket.close() ``` WebSockets present a mapping interface, so you can use them in the same way as a `scope`. For instance: `websocket['path']` will return the ASGI path. #### URL The websocket URL is accessed as `websocket.url`. The property is actually a subclass of `str`, and also exposes all the components that can be parsed out of the URL. For example: `websocket.url.path`, `websocket.url.port`, `websocket.url.scheme`. #### Headers Headers are exposed as an immutable, case-insensitive, multi-dict. For example: `websocket.headers['sec-websocket-version']` #### Query Parameters Query parameters are exposed as an immutable multi-dict. For example: `websocket.query_params['search']` #### Path Parameters Router path parameters are exposed as a dictionary interface. For example: `websocket.path_params['username']` ### Accepting the connection * `await websocket.accept(subprotocol=None, headers=None)` ### Sending data * `await websocket.send_text(data)` * `await websocket.send_bytes(data)` * `await websocket.send_json(data)` JSON messages default to being sent over text data frames, from version 0.10.0 onwards. Use `websocket.send_json(data, mode="binary")` to send JSON over binary data frames. ### Receiving data * `await websocket.receive_text()` * `await websocket.receive_bytes()` * `await websocket.receive_json()` May raise `starlette.websockets.WebSocketDisconnect()`. JSON messages default to being received over text data frames, from version 0.10.0 onwards. Use `websocket.receive_json(data, mode="binary")` to receive JSON over binary data frames. ### Iterating data * `websocket.iter_text()` * `websocket.iter_bytes()` * `websocket.iter_json()` Similar to `receive_text`, `receive_bytes`, and `receive_json` but returns an async iterator. ```python hl_lines="7-8" from starlette.websockets import WebSocket async def app(scope, receive, send): websocket = WebSocket(scope=scope, receive=receive, send=send) await websocket.accept() async for message in websocket.iter_text(): await websocket.send_text(f"Message text was: {message}") await websocket.close() ``` When `starlette.websockets.WebSocketDisconnect` is raised, the iterator will exit. ### Closing the connection * `await websocket.close(code=1000, reason=None)` ### Sending and receiving messages If you need to send or receive raw ASGI messages then you should use `websocket.send()` and `websocket.receive()` rather than using the raw `send` and `receive` callables. This will ensure that the websocket's state is kept correctly updated. * `await websocket.send(message)` * `await websocket.receive()` ### Send Denial Response If you call `websocket.close()` before calling `websocket.accept()` then the server will automatically send a HTTP 403 error to the client. If you want to send a different error response, you can use the `websocket.send_denial_response()` method. This will send the response and then close the connection. * `await websocket.send_denial_response(response)` This requires the ASGI server to support the WebSocket Denial Response extension. If it is not supported a `RuntimeError` will be raised. # routing.md ## HTTP Routing Starlette has a simple but capable request routing system. A routing table is defined as a list of routes, and passed when instantiating the application. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.routing import Route async def homepage(request): return PlainTextResponse("Homepage") async def about(request): return PlainTextResponse("About") routes = [ Route("/", endpoint=homepage), Route("/about", endpoint=about), ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` The `endpoint` argument can be one of: * A regular function or async function, which accepts a single `request` argument and which should return a response. * A class that implements the ASGI interface, such as Starlette's [HTTPEndpoint](endpoints.md#httpendpoint). ## Path Parameters Paths can use URI templating style to capture path components. ```python Route('/users/{username}', user) ``` By default this will capture characters up to the end of the path or the next `/`. You can use convertors to modify what is captured. The available convertors are: * `str` returns a string, and is the default. * `int` returns a Python integer. * `float` returns a Python float. * `uuid` return a Python `uuid.UUID` instance. * `path` returns the rest of the path, including any additional `/` characters. Convertors are used by prefixing them with a colon, like so: ```python Route('/users/{user_id:int}', user) Route('/floating-point/{number:float}', floating_point) Route('/uploaded/{rest_of_path:path}', uploaded) ``` If you need a different converter that is not defined, you can create your own. See below an example on how to create a `datetime` convertor, and how to register it: ```python from datetime import datetime from starlette.convertors import Convertor, register_url_convertor class DateTimeConvertor(Convertor): regex = "[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2}T[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}(.[0-9]+)?" def convert(self, value: str) -> datetime: return datetime.strptime(value, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S") def to_string(self, value: datetime) -> str: return value.strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S") register_url_convertor("datetime", DateTimeConvertor()) ``` After registering it, you'll be able to use it as: ```python Route('/history/{date:datetime}', history) ``` Path parameters are made available in the request, as the `request.path_params` dictionary. ```python async def user(request): user_id = request.path_params['user_id'] ... ``` ## Handling HTTP methods Routes can also specify which HTTP methods are handled by an endpoint: ```python Route('/users/{user_id:int}', user, methods=["GET", "POST"]) ``` By default function endpoints will only accept `GET` requests, unless specified. ## Submounting routes In large applications you might find that you want to break out parts of the routing table, based on a common path prefix. ```python routes = [ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=[ Route('/', users, methods=['GET', 'POST']), Route('/{username}', user), ]) ] ``` This style allows you to define different subsets of the routing table in different parts of your project. ```python from myproject import users, auth routes = [ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=users.routes), Mount('/auth', routes=auth.routes), ] ``` You can also use mounting to include sub-applications within your Starlette application. For example... ```python # This is a standalone static files server: app = StaticFiles(directory="static") # This is a static files server mounted within a Starlette application, # underneath the "/static" path. routes = [ ... Mount("/static", app=StaticFiles(directory="static"), name="static") ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` ## Reverse URL lookups You'll often want to be able to generate the URL for a particular route, such as in cases where you need to return a redirect response. * Signature: `url_for(name, **path_params) -> URL` ```python routes = [ Route("/", homepage, name="homepage") ] # We can use the following to return a URL... url = request.url_for("homepage") ``` URL lookups can include path parameters... ```python routes = [ Route("/users/{username}", user, name="user_detail") ] # We can use the following to return a URL... url = request.url_for("user_detail", username=...) ``` If a `Mount` includes a `name`, then submounts should use a `{prefix}:{name}` style for reverse URL lookups. ```python routes = [ Mount("/users", name="users", routes=[ Route("/", user, name="user_list"), Route("/{username}", user, name="user_detail") ]) ] # We can use the following to return URLs... url = request.url_for("users:user_list") url = request.url_for("users:user_detail", username=...) ``` Mounted applications may include a `path=...` parameter. ```python routes = [ ... Mount("/static", app=StaticFiles(directory="static"), name="static") ] # We can use the following to return URLs... url = request.url_for("static", path="/css/base.css") ``` For cases where there is no `request` instance, you can make reverse lookups against the application, although these will only return the URL path. ```python url = app.url_path_for("user_detail", username=...) ``` ## Host-based routing If you want to use different routes for the same path based on the `Host` header. Note that port is removed from the `Host` header when matching. For example, `Host (host='example.org:3600', ...)` will be processed even if the `Host` header contains or does not contain a port other than `3600` (`example.org:5600`, `example.org`). Therefore, you can specify the port if you need it for use in `url_for`. There are several ways to connect host-based routes to your application ```python site = Router() # Use eg. `@site.route()` to configure this. api = Router() # Use eg. `@api.route()` to configure this. news = Router() # Use eg. `@news.route()` to configure this. routes = [ Host('api.example.org', api, name="site_api") ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) app.host('www.example.org', site, name="main_site") news_host = Host('news.example.org', news) app.router.routes.append(news_host) ``` URL lookups can include host parameters just like path parameters ```python routes = [ Host("{subdomain}.example.org", name="sub", app=Router(routes=[ Mount("/users", name="users", routes=[ Route("/", user, name="user_list"), Route("/{username}", user, name="user_detail") ]) ])) ] ... url = request.url_for("sub:users:user_detail", username=..., subdomain=...) url = request.url_for("sub:users:user_list", subdomain=...) ``` ## Route priority Incoming paths are matched against each `Route` in order. In cases where more that one route could match an incoming path, you should take care to ensure that more specific routes are listed before general cases. For example: ```python # Don't do this: `/users/me` will never match incoming requests. routes = [ Route('/users/{username}', user), Route('/users/me', current_user), ] # Do this: `/users/me` is tested first. routes = [ Route('/users/me', current_user), Route('/users/{username}', user), ] ``` ## Working with Router instances If you're working at a low-level you might want to use a plain `Router` instance, rather that creating a `Starlette` application. This gives you a lightweight ASGI application that just provides the application routing, without wrapping it up in any middleware. ```python app = Router(routes=[ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=[ Route('/', users, methods=['GET', 'POST']), Route('/{username}', user), ]) ]) ``` ## WebSocket Routing When working with WebSocket endpoints, you should use `WebSocketRoute` instead of the usual `Route`. Path parameters, and reverse URL lookups for `WebSocketRoute` work the the same as HTTP `Route`, which can be found in the HTTP [Route](#http-routing) section above. The `endpoint` argument can be one of: * An async function, which accepts a single `websocket` argument. * A class that implements the ASGI interface, such as Starlette's [WebSocketEndpoint](endpoints.md#websocketendpoint). # endpoints.md Starlette includes the classes `HTTPEndpoint` and `WebSocketEndpoint` that provide a class-based view pattern for handling HTTP method dispatching and WebSocket sessions. ### HTTPEndpoint The `HTTPEndpoint` class can be used as an ASGI application: ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.endpoints import HTTPEndpoint class App(HTTPEndpoint): async def get(self, request): return PlainTextResponse(f"Hello, world!") ``` If you're using a Starlette application instance to handle routing, you can dispatch to an `HTTPEndpoint` class. Make sure to dispatch to the class itself, rather than to an instance of the class: ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.endpoints import HTTPEndpoint from starlette.routing import Route class Homepage(HTTPEndpoint): async def get(self, request): return PlainTextResponse(f"Hello, world!") class User(HTTPEndpoint): async def get(self, request): username = request.path_params['username'] return PlainTextResponse(f"Hello, {username}") routes = [ Route("/", Homepage), Route("/{username}", User) ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` HTTP endpoint classes will respond with "405 Method not allowed" responses for any request methods which do not map to a corresponding handler. ### WebSocketEndpoint The `WebSocketEndpoint` class is an ASGI application that presents a wrapper around the functionality of a `WebSocket` instance. The ASGI connection scope is accessible on the endpoint instance via `.scope` and has an attribute `encoding` which may optionally be set, in order to validate the expected websocket data in the `on_receive` method. The encoding types are: * `'json'` * `'bytes'` * `'text'` There are three overridable methods for handling specific ASGI websocket message types: * `async def on_connect(websocket, **kwargs)` * `async def on_receive(websocket, data)` * `async def on_disconnect(websocket, close_code)` The `WebSocketEndpoint` can also be used with the `Starlette` application class. # middleware.md Starlette includes several middleware classes for adding behavior that is applied across your entire application. These are all implemented as standard ASGI middleware classes, and can be applied either to Starlette or to any other ASGI application. ## Using middleware The Starlette application class allows you to include the ASGI middleware in a way that ensures that it remains wrapped by the exception handler. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.middleware import Middleware from starlette.middleware.httpsredirect import HTTPSRedirectMiddleware from starlette.middleware.trustedhost import TrustedHostMiddleware routes = ... # Ensure that all requests include an 'example.com' or # '*.example.com' host header, and strictly enforce https-only access. middleware = [ Middleware( TrustedHostMiddleware, allowed_hosts=['example.com', '*.example.com'], ), Middleware(HTTPSRedirectMiddleware) ] app = Starlette(routes=routes, middleware=middleware) ``` Every Starlette application automatically includes two pieces of middleware by default: * `ServerErrorMiddleware` - Ensures that application exceptions may return a custom 500 page, or display an application traceback in DEBUG mode. This is *always* the outermost middleware layer. * `ExceptionMiddleware` - Adds exception handlers, so that particular types of expected exception cases can be associated with handler functions. For example raising `HTTPException(status_code=404)` within an endpoint will end up rendering a custom 404 page. Middleware is evaluated from top-to-bottom, so the flow of execution in our example application would look like this: * Middleware * `ServerErrorMiddleware` * `TrustedHostMiddleware` * `HTTPSRedirectMiddleware` * `ExceptionMiddleware` * Routing * Endpoint The following middleware implementations are available in the Starlette package: - CORSMiddleware - SessionMiddleware - HTTPSRedirectMiddleware - TrustedHostMiddleware - GZipMiddleware - BaseHTTPMiddleware # lifespan.md Starlette applications can register a lifespan handler for dealing with code that needs to run before the application starts up, or when the application is shutting down. ```python import contextlib from starlette.applications import Starlette @contextlib.asynccontextmanager async def lifespan(app): async with some_async_resource(): print("Run at startup!") yield print("Run on shutdown!") routes = [ ... ] app = Starlette(routes=routes, lifespan=lifespan) ``` Starlette will not start serving any incoming requests until the lifespan has been run. The lifespan teardown will run once all connections have been closed, and any in-process background tasks have completed. Consider using [`anyio.create_task_group()`](https://anyio.readthedocs.io/en/stable/tasks.html) for managing asynchronous tasks. ## Lifespan State The lifespan has the concept of `state`, which is a dictionary that can be used to share the objects between the lifespan, and the requests. ```python import contextlib from typing import AsyncIterator, TypedDict import httpx from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.routing import Route class State(TypedDict): http_client: httpx.AsyncClient @contextlib.asynccontextmanager async def lifespan(app: Starlette) -> AsyncIterator[State]: async with httpx.AsyncClient() as client: yield {"http_client": client} async def homepage(request: Request) -> PlainTextResponse: client = request.state.http_client response = await client.get("https://www.example.com") return PlainTextResponse(response.text) app = Starlette( lifespan=lifespan, routes=[Route("/", homepage)] ) ``` The `state` received on the requests is a **shallow** copy of the state received on the lifespan handler. ## Running lifespan in tests You should use `TestClient` as a context manager, to ensure that the lifespan is called. ```python from example import app from starlette.testclient import TestClient def test_homepage(): with TestClient(app) as client: # Application's lifespan is called on entering the block. response = client.get("/") assert response.status_code == 200 # And the lifespan's teardown is run when exiting the block. ``` # background.md Starlette includes a `BackgroundTask` class for in-process background tasks. A background task should be attached to a response, and will run only once the response has been sent. ### Background Task Used to add a single background task to a response. Signature: `BackgroundTask(func, *args, **kwargs)` ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import JSONResponse from starlette.routing import Route from starlette.background import BackgroundTask ... async def signup(request): data = await request.json() username = data['username'] email = data['email'] task = BackgroundTask(send_welcome_email, to_address=email) message = {'status': 'Signup successful'} return JSONResponse(message, background=task) async def send_welcome_email(to_address): ... routes = [ ... Route('/user/signup', endpoint=signup, methods=['POST']) ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` ### BackgroundTasks Used to add multiple background tasks to a response. Signature: `BackgroundTasks(tasks=[])` !!! important The tasks are executed in order. In case one of the tasks raises an exception, the following tasks will not get the opportunity to be executed. # server-push.md Starlette includes support for HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 server push, making it possible to push resources to the client to speed up page load times. ### `Request.send_push_promise` Used to initiate a server push for a resource. If server push is not available this method does nothing. Signature: `send_push_promise(path)` * `path` - A string denoting the path of the resource. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse from starlette.routing import Route, Mount from starlette.staticfiles import StaticFiles async def homepage(request): """ Homepage which uses server push to deliver the stylesheet. """ await request.send_push_promise("/static/style.css") return HTMLResponse( '<html><head><link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style.css"/></head></html>' ) routes = [ Route("/", endpoint=homepage), Mount("/static", StaticFiles(directory="static"), name="static") ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` # exceptions.md Starlette allows you to install custom exception handlers to deal with how you return responses when errors or handled exceptions occur. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.exceptions import HTTPException from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse HTML_404_PAGE = ... HTML_500_PAGE = ... async def not_found(request: Request, exc: HTTPException): return HTMLResponse(content=HTML_404_PAGE, status_code=exc.status_code) async def server_error(request: Request, exc: HTTPException): return HTMLResponse(content=HTML_500_PAGE, status_code=exc.status_code) exception_handlers = { 404: not_found, 500: server_error } app = Starlette(routes=routes, exception_handlers=exception_handlers) ``` If `debug` is enabled and an error occurs, then instead of using the installed 500 handler, Starlette will respond with a traceback response. ```python app = Starlette(debug=True, routes=routes, exception_handlers=exception_handlers) ``` As well as registering handlers for specific status codes, you can also register handlers for classes of exceptions. In particular you might want to override how the built-in `HTTPException` class is handled. For example, to use JSON style responses: ```python async def http_exception(request: Request, exc: HTTPException): return JSONResponse({"detail": exc.detail}, status_code=exc.status_code) exception_handlers = { HTTPException: http_exception } ``` The `HTTPException` is also equipped with the `headers` argument. Which allows the propagation of the headers to the response class: ```python async def http_exception(request: Request, exc: HTTPException): return JSONResponse( {"detail": exc.detail}, status_code=exc.status_code, headers=exc.headers ) ``` You might also want to override how `WebSocketException` is handled: ```python async def websocket_exception(websocket: WebSocket, exc: WebSocketException): await websocket.close(code=1008) exception_handlers = { WebSocketException: websocket_exception } ``` ## Errors and handled exceptions It is important to differentiate between handled exceptions and errors. Handled exceptions do not represent error cases. They are coerced into appropriate HTTP responses, which are then sent through the standard middleware stack. By default the `HTTPException` class is used to manage any handled exceptions. Errors are any other exception that occurs within the application. These cases should bubble through the entire middleware stack as exceptions. Any error logging middleware should ensure that it re-raises the exception all the way up to the server. In practical terms, the error handled used is `exception_handler[500]` or `exception_handler[Exception]`. Both keys `500` and `Exception` can be used. See below: ```python async def handle_error(request: Request, exc: HTTPException): # Perform some logic return JSONResponse({"detail": exc.detail}, status_code=exc.status_code) exception_handlers = { Exception: handle_error # or "500: handle_error" } ``` It's important to notice that in case a [`BackgroundTask`](https://www.starlette.io/background/) raises an exception, it will be handled by the `handle_error` function, but at that point, the response was already sent. In other words, the response created by `handle_error` will be discarded. In case the error happens before the response was sent, then it will use the response object - in the above example, the returned `JSONResponse`. In order to deal with this behaviour correctly, the middleware stack of a `Starlette` application is configured like this: * `ServerErrorMiddleware` - Returns 500 responses when server errors occur. * Installed middleware * `ExceptionMiddleware` - Deals with handled exceptions, and returns responses. * Router * Endpoints ## HTTPException The `HTTPException` class provides a base class that you can use for any handled exceptions. The `ExceptionMiddleware` implementation defaults to returning plain-text HTTP responses for any `HTTPException`. * `HTTPException(status_code, detail=None, headers=None)` You should only raise `HTTPException` inside routing or endpoints. Middleware classes should instead just return appropriate responses directly. ## WebSocketException You can use the `WebSocketException` class to raise errors inside of WebSocket endpoints. * `WebSocketException(code=1008, reason=None)` You can set any code valid as defined [in the specification](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6455#section-7.4.1). # testclient.md The test client allows you to make requests against your ASGI application, using the `httpx` library. ```python from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse from starlette.testclient import TestClient async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = HTMLResponse('<html><body>Hello, world!</body></html>') await response(scope, receive, send) def test_app(): client = TestClient(app) response = client.get('/') assert response.status_code == 200 ``` The test client exposes the same interface as any other `httpx` session. In particular, note that the calls to make a request are just standard function calls, not awaitables. You can use any of `httpx` standard API, such as authentication, session cookies handling, or file uploads. For example, to set headers on the TestClient you can do: ```python client = TestClient(app) # Set headers on the client for future requests client.headers = {"Authorization": "..."} response = client.get("/") # Set headers for each request separately response = client.get("/", headers={"Authorization": "..."}) ``` And for example to send files with the TestClient: ```python client = TestClient(app) # Send a single file with open("example.txt", "rb") as f: response = client.post("/form", files={"file": f}) # Send multiple files with open("example.txt", "rb") as f1: with open("example.png", "rb") as f2: files = {"file1": f1, "file2": ("filename", f2, "image/png")} response = client.post("/form", files=files) ``` ### Testing WebSocket sessions You can also test websocket sessions with the test client. The `httpx` library will be used to build the initial handshake, meaning you can use the same authentication options and other headers between both http and websocket testing. ```python from starlette.testclient import TestClient from starlette.websockets import WebSocket async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'websocket' websocket = WebSocket(scope, receive=receive, send=send) await websocket.accept() await websocket.send_text('Hello, world!') await websocket.close() def test_app(): client = TestClient(app) with client.websocket_connect('/') as websocket: data = websocket.receive_text() assert data == 'Hello, world!' ``` #### Sending data * `.send_text(data)` - Send the given text to the application. * `.send_bytes(data)` - Send the given bytes to the application. * `.send_json(data, mode="text")` - Send the given data to the application. Use `mode="binary"` to send JSON over binary data frames. #### Receiving data * `.receive_text()` - Wait for incoming text sent by the application and return it. * `.receive_bytes()` - Wait for incoming bytestring sent by the application and return it. * `.receive_json(mode="text")` - Wait for incoming json data sent by the application and return it. Use `mode="binary"` to receive JSON over binary data frames. May raise `starlette.websockets.WebSocketDisconnect`. #### Closing the connection * `.close(code=1000)` - Perform a client-side close of the websocket connection. ### Asynchronous tests Sometimes you will want to do async things outside of your application. For example, you might want to check the state of your database after calling your app using your existing async database client / infrastructure. For these situations, using `TestClient` is difficult because it creates it's own event loop and async resources (like a database connection) often cannot be shared across event loops. The simplest way to work around this is to just make your entire test async and use an async client, like [httpx.AsyncClient]. Here is an example of such a test: ```python from httpx import AsyncClient from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.routing import Route from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse def hello(request: Request) -> PlainTextResponse: return PlainTextResponse("Hello World!") app = Starlette(routes=[Route("/", hello)]) # if you're using pytest, you'll need to to add an async marker like: # @pytest.mark.anyio # using https://github.com/agronholm/anyio # or install and configure pytest-asyncio (https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-asyncio) async def test_app() -> None: # note: you _must_ set `base_url` for relative urls like "/" to work async with AsyncClient(app=app, base_url="http://testserver") as client: r = await client.get("/") assert r.status_code == 200 assert r.text == "Hello World!" ```</doc></optional></project>
xml
FastHTML Docs
index.html.md
# FastHTML <!-- WARNING: THIS FILE WAS AUTOGENERATED! DO NOT EDIT! --> Welcome to the official FastHTML documentation. FastHTML is a new next-generation web framework for fast, scalable web applications with minimal, compact code. It’s designed to be: - Powerful and expressive enough to build the most advanced, interactive web apps you can imagine. - Fast and lightweight, so you can write less code and get more done. - Easy to learn and use, with a simple, intuitive syntax that makes it easy to build complex apps quickly. FastHTML apps are just Python code, so you can use FastHTML with the full power of the Python language and ecosystem. FastHTML’s functionality maps 1:1 directly to HTML and HTTP, but allows them to be encapsulated using good software engineering practices—so you’ll need to understand these foundations to use this library fully. To understand how and why this works, please read this first: [about.fastht.ml](https://about.fastht.ml/). ## Installation Since `fasthtml` is a Python library, you can install it with: ``` sh pip install python-fasthtml ``` In the near future, we hope to add component libraries that can likewise be installed via `pip`. ## Usage For a minimal app, create a file “main.py” as follows: <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python from fasthtml.common import * app,rt = fast_app() @rt('/') def get(): return Div(P('Hello World!'), hx_get="/change") serve() ``` </div> Running the app with `python main.py` prints out a link to your running app: `http://localhost:5001`. Visit that link in your browser and you should see a page with the text “Hello World!”. Congratulations, you’ve just created your first FastHTML app! Adding interactivity is surprisingly easy, thanks to HTMX. Modify the file to add this function: <div class="code-with-filename"> **main.py** ``` python @rt('/change') def get(): return P('Nice to be here!') ``` </div> You now have a page with a clickable element that changes the text when clicked. When clicking on this link, the server will respond with an “HTML partial”—that is, just a snippet of HTML which will be inserted into the existing page. In this case, the returned element will replace the original P element (since that’s the default behavior of HTMX) with the new version returned by the second route. This “hypermedia-based” approach to web development is a powerful way to build web applications. ### Getting help from AI Because FastHTML is newer than most LLMs, AI systems like Cursor, ChatGPT, Claude, and Copilot won’t give useful answers about it. To fix that problem, we’ve provided an LLM-friendly guide that teaches them how to use FastHTML. To use it, add this link for your AI helper to use: - [/llms-ctx.txt](https://docs.fastht.ml/llms-ctx.txt) This example is in a format based on recommendations from Anthropic for use with [Claude Projects](https://support.anthropic.com/en/articles/9517075-what-are-projects). This works so well that we’ve actually found that Claude can provide even better information than our own documentation! For instance, read through [this annotated Claude chat](https://gist.github.com/jph00/9559b0a563f6a370029bec1d1cc97b74) for some great getting-started information, entirely generated from a project using the above text file as context. If you use Cursor, type `@doc` then choose “*Add new doc*”, and use the /llms-ctx.txt link above. The context file is auto-generated from our [`llms.txt`](https://llmstxt.org/) (our proposed standard for providing AI-friendly information)—you can generate alternative versions suitable for other models as needed. ## Next Steps Start with the official sources to learn more about FastHTML: - [About](https://about.fastht.ml): Learn about the core ideas behind FastHTML - [Documentation](https://docs.fastht.ml): Learn from examples how to write FastHTML code - [Idiomatic app](https://github.com/AnswerDotAI/fasthtml/blob/main/examples/adv_app.py): Heavily commented source code walking through a complete application, including custom authentication, JS library connections, and database use. We also have a 1-hour intro video: <https://www.youtube.com/embed/Auqrm7WFc0I> The capabilities of FastHTML are vast and growing, and not all the features and patterns have been documented yet. Be prepared to invest time into studying and modifying source code, such as the main FastHTML repo’s notebooks and the official FastHTML examples repo: - [FastHTML Examples Repo on GitHub](https://github.com/AnswerDotAI/fasthtml-example) - [FastHTML Repo on GitHub](https://github.com/AnswerDotAI/fasthtml) Then explore the small but growing third-party ecosystem of FastHTML tutorials, notebooks, libraries, and components: - [FastHTML Gallery](https://gallery.fastht.ml): Learn from minimal examples of components (ie chat bubbles, click-to-edit, infinite scroll, etc) - [Creating Custom FastHTML Tags for Markdown Rendering](https://isaac-flath.github.io/website/posts/boots/FasthtmlTutorial.html) by Isaac Flath - Your tutorial here! Finally, join the FastHTML community to ask questions, share your work, and learn from others: - [Discord](https://discord.gg/qcXvcxMhdP)
md
FastHTML Docs
api/cli.html.md
# Command Line Tools <!-- WARNING: THIS FILE WAS AUTOGENERATED! DO NOT EDIT! --> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ <a href="https://github.com/AnswerDotAI/fasthtml/blob/main/fasthtml/cli.py#L15" target="_blank" style="float:right; font-size:smaller">source</a> ### railway_link > railway_link () *Link the current directory to the current project’s Railway service* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ <a href="https://github.com/AnswerDotAI/fasthtml/blob/main/fasthtml/cli.py#L33" target="_blank" style="float:right; font-size:smaller">source</a> ### railway_deploy > railway_deploy (name:str, mount:<function bool_arg>=True) *Deploy a FastHTML app to Railway* <table> <thead> <tr class="header"> <th></th> <th><strong>Type</strong></th> <th><strong>Default</strong></th> <th><strong>Details</strong></th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr class="odd"> <td>name</td> <td>str</td> <td></td> <td>The project name to deploy</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>mount</td> <td>bool_arg</td> <td>True</td> <td>Create a mounted volume at /app/data?</td> </tr> </tbody> </table>
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