Why do you need to redirect at all? You can just call the search_results() function directly from the myButton() function:
def search_results(resultSet): div = DIV(.....) return dict(div=div) def myButton(): someId = request.args(0) resultSet = db(....) return search_results(resultSet) If the search_results() function is needed in other controllers, you could define it in a model file or in a module and import it. Note, functions that take arguments (as search_results does above) are not exposed as actions accessible via URL -- they are for internal use only (same for a function that begins with a double underscore, even if it doesn't take any arguments). Anthony On Thursday, May 23, 2013 2:51:24 PM UTC-4, brac...@gmail.com wrote: > > In my views, I have: > > {{=A('click for more information', _href=URL("myCallback", args=[1]))}} > > > When the anchor button is clicked, my callback will do some lookup and > processing in the db, and then will redirect to a new page populated with > the new information: > > def search_results(): > resultSet = request.args(0) > # Build HTML helpers using resultSet > div = DIV(.....) > > return dict(div=div) > > def myButton(): > # Figure out the id from the request > someId = request.args(0) > > # get some data from db using the id > resultSet = db(....) > > > # want to redirect to another page with the new data in the resultSet > redirect(URL('search_results', args=resultSet)) > > But doing the redirect with the resultSet args will screw up the URL and > I'll end up with an invalid request. > > I've thought of two ways around this: > > 1) Create a temporary session variable and store the resultSet there. Once > I'm done with the data, I'll explicitly clear it. > > 2) Instead of doing the database logic in the callback, pass the id to the > search_results() and do the database logic there. > > I'm hesitant to adopt the first option because it seems messy to create a > bunch of session variables for temporary things (unless this is standard > practice?). > > The second option seems okay, but I'm afraid that the code will become too > specific to that particular anchor tag. That is, if I create a new anchor > tag to do some other search, the database logic may be different than the > one inside the search_results(). For this, I guess the better question > should be if the database logic code should live in the callback function > or in the target redirect controller function? > > > In spite of this, what would be the clean or proper way of sending data > with a redirect from a callback function? > -- --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "web2py-users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to web2py+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.