No. -- Thadeus
On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 11:07 AM, ilovesss2004 <yyiillu...@gmail.com> wrote: > Now I know the web app will work just with the pyc files, and others > can not view the source code from pyc files. But the source code can > still be viewed in web browser (I mean the source code of html and > javascript at the client side). Is there a method to encrypt the > source code by a language that the web browser knows so that the > source code will be unreadable but still readable to web browser? > > On Jul 29, 5:41 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote: >> It depends of what you mean by HTML. >> >> say you have views/default/index.html which extends views/layout.html. >> >> When you bytecode compile the two .html files are merged, turned into >> a python program and this is bytecode compiled. >> >> Now you can distribute your app without the .html files and it will >> work. >> >> You can still somewhat infer the html from the .pyc files but it is >> not trivial since there is not a 1-1 map. >> >> Massimo >> >> On Jul 29, 9:23 am, ilovesss2004 <yyiillu...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> > But the html files are also part of the web app. Is there someway to >> > encrypt them by use of web2py or python programming? >> >> > On Jul 29, 4:15 pm, Jean-Guy <jean...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> > > Of course yes! It is the HTML nature and the Web paradigm is based on >> > > this state of affairs... >> >> > > Maybe the python code embeded could be compiled too, but really not sure >> > > about that... Massimo could be a better help on that. >> >> > > Jonhy >> >> > > On 2010-07-29 10:12, ilovesss2004 wrote: >> >> > > > source code of html files are still viewable. >