Thanks.

I first played with routes_onerror but it was useless for me since it
affects only redirection (I needed to trap the error *before*
redirection occurs).

Then I found this thread:
http://groups.google.com/group/web2py/browse_thread/thread/95910208a48481db/aad62d1e90ae2f54?lnk=gst&q=flatpages#aad62d1e90ae2f54

Using a regexp to map .html urls to a controller is ok and I will
probably use that, but it means the url still has to have ".html" in
it, thus not reaching the goal of having a complete arbitrary url. But
it's ok though.

On 26 mai, 08:17, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> There may be an easier to implement Djangoflatpagesin web2py but if
> you need to trap error codes, look into
>
> web2py/routes.examples.py
>
> Massimo
>
> On May 26, 12:51 am, desfrenes <desfre...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > I'm trying to build something similar to the flatpage application in
> > django, that is an app that maps a simple content to an arbitrary url.
> > To do so I have to trap 400 and 404 errors and then see if a content
> > is attached to this url. If so, display it, if not, raise the error
> > again.
>
> > How can I trap 400 and 404 errors ?
>
> > Cheers
>
>
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