yes. For example: routes_in = [ ('/$yoursitename/users','/init/default/users/$yoursitename'), ]
the optionally @request.restful() def users(): def GET(yoursitename): return dict(message='your site name is: '+yoursitename) return locals() On Mar 23, 2011, at 8:31 AM, Anthony wrote: > Massimo, I think Tom was referring to Flask's ability to include an arg at an > arbitrary place in the URL path (e.g., '/<yoursitename>/users'), not the > ability to specify the routes via decorators. I think the former *can* be > achieved in web2py using the pattern-based rewrite system, right? > > Anthony > > On Wednesday, March 23, 2011 9:17:31 AM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro wrote: > This is not an option in web2py because the controller is executed > after the requests arrives not imported before (as in Flask). Anyway, > that works better for simple apps but becomes a mess if you have many > functions because the routing info is scattered all over the place. > Moreover - when it comes to rest - it requires that you use the same > function for multiple methods (GET/POST/etc) by using multiple > decorators or that you use different functions with different names to > handle different names (I do not like that). > > On Mar 22, 3:13 am, Tom Atkins <mink...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I might be being naive here but in Flask I can do: > > > > @app.route('/<yoursitename>/users') > > ... def editusers(yoursitename): pass > > > > print url_for('editprofile', yoursitename='Supersite') > > > > gives: > > > > /Supersite/users > > > > On 22 March 2011 05:23, Jonathan Lundell <jlun...@pobox.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > On Mar 21, 2011, at 7:44 PM, Indra Gunawan wrote: > > > > > Agree, Flask way looks more elegant (see Variable Rules). It could be > > > nice > > > if this way also exists on Web2Py. > > > > > On 22 March 2011 06:05, Tom Atkins <mink...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > >> I was playing with Flask and I have to say its solution to routing is > > >> very > > >> nice: > > > > >>http://flask.pocoo.org/docs/quickstart/#routing > > > > >> The use of variable names anywhere within the URL structure is very > > >> handy. > > >> Anything like this possible in web2py? > > > > > Flask doesn't really allow variable names anywhere; near as I can tell > > > they're a considerably restricted version of web2py's args list.