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author | Moshe Zadka <moshez@math.huji.ac.il> | 2000-08-25 21:47:56 (GMT) |
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committer | Moshe Zadka <moshez@math.huji.ac.il> | 2000-08-25 21:47:56 (GMT) |
commit | a1a4b5916b08b24ac0f326949f6d0a0a3cedb963 (patch) | |
tree | 56facd35f1d910d71d385d9dc166c811b82a11b4 /Doc | |
parent | dc3d606bd931bc7ffa780bd397ca184f69bb3838 (diff) | |
download | cpython-a1a4b5916b08b24ac0f326949f6d0a0a3cedb963.zip cpython-a1a4b5916b08b24ac0f326949f6d0a0a3cedb963.tar.gz cpython-a1a4b5916b08b24ac0f326949f6d0a0a3cedb963.tar.bz2 |
Closing patch #101120 -- After everyone agreed.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libcgi.tex | 75 |
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 35 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libcgi.tex b/Doc/lib/libcgi.tex index e90bf1c..285c08f 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libcgi.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libcgi.tex @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ telling the client what kind of data is following. Python code to generate a minimal header section looks like this: \begin{verbatim} -print "Content-type: text/html" # HTML is following +print "Content-Type: text/html" # HTML is following print # blank line, end of headers \end{verbatim} @@ -59,9 +59,6 @@ print "<H1>This is my first CGI script</H1>" print "Hello, world!" \end{verbatim} -(It may not be fully legal HTML according to the letter of the -standard, but any browser will understand it.) - \subsection{Using the cgi module} \nodename{Using the cgi module} @@ -77,9 +74,16 @@ value of various environment variables set according to the CGI standard). Since it may consume standard input, it should be instantiated only once. -The \class{FieldStorage} instance can be accessed as if it were a Python -dictionary. For instance, the following code (which assumes that the -\code{content-type} header and blank line have already been printed) +The \class{FieldStorage} instance can be indexed like a Python +dictionary, and also supports the standard dictionary methods +\function{has_key()} and \function{keys()}. +Form fields containing empty strings are ignored +and do not appear in the dictionary; to keep such values, provide +the optional \samp{keep_blank_values} argument when creating the +\class {FieldStorage} instance. + +For instance, the following code (which assumes that the +\code{Content-Type} header and blank line have already been printed) checks that the fields \code{name} and \code{addr} are both set to a non-empty string: @@ -87,23 +91,30 @@ non-empty string: form = cgi.FieldStorage() form_ok = 0 if form.has_key("name") and form.has_key("addr"): - if form["name"].value != "" and form["addr"].value != "": - form_ok = 1 + form_ok = 1 if not form_ok: print "<H1>Error</H1>" print "Please fill in the name and addr fields." return +print "<p>name:", form["name"].value +print "<p>addr:", form["addr"].value ...further form processing here... \end{verbatim} Here the fields, accessed through \samp{form[\var{key}]}, are themselves instances of \class{FieldStorage} (or \class{MiniFieldStorage}, depending on the form encoding). +The \member{value} attribute of the instance yields the string value +of the field. The \function{getvalue()} method returns this string value +directly; it also accepts an optional second argument as a default to +return if the requested key is not present. If the submitted form data contains more than one field with the same name, the object retrieved by \samp{form[\var{key}]} is not a \class{FieldStorage} or \class{MiniFieldStorage} -instance but a list of such instances. If you expect this possibility +instance but a list of such instances. Similarly, in this situation, +\samp{form.getvalue(\var{key})} would return a list of strings. +If you expect this possibility (i.e., when your HTML form contains multiple fields with the same name), use the \function{type()} function to determine whether you have a single instance or a list of instances. For example, here's @@ -111,27 +122,21 @@ code that concatenates any number of username fields, separated by commas: \begin{verbatim} -username = form["username"] -if type(username) is type([]): +value = form.getvalue("username", "") +if type(value) is type([]): # Multiple username fields specified - usernames = "" - for item in username: - if usernames: - # Next item -- insert comma - usernames = usernames + "," + item.value - else: - # First item -- don't insert comma - usernames = item.value + usernames = ",".join(value) else: - # Single username field specified - usernames = username.value + # Single or no username field specified + usernames = value \end{verbatim} -If a field represents an uploaded file, the value attribute reads the +If a field represents an uploaded file, accessing the value via the +\member{value} attribute or the \function{getvalue()} method reads the entire file in memory as a string. This may not be what you want. -You can test for an uploaded file by testing either the filename -attribute or the file attribute. You can then read the data at -leisure from the file attribute: +You can test for an uploaded file by testing either the \member{filename} +attribute or the \member{file} attribute. You can then read the data at +leisure from the \member{file} attribute: \begin{verbatim} fileitem = form["userfile"] @@ -157,7 +162,8 @@ When a form is submitted in the ``old'' format (as the query string or as a single data part of type \mimetype{application/x-www-form-urlencoded}), the items will actually be instances of the class \class{MiniFieldStorage}. In this case, the -list, file and filename attributes are always \code{None}. +\member{list}, \member{file}, and \member{filename} attributes are +always \code{None}. \subsection{Old classes} @@ -233,23 +239,22 @@ exception. \begin{funcdesc}{parse_multipart}{fp, pdict} Parse input of type \mimetype{multipart/form-data} (for file uploads). Arguments are \var{fp} for the input file and -\var{pdict} for the dictionary containing other parameters of -\code{content-type} header +\var{pdict} for a dictionary containing other parameters in +the \code{Content-Type} header. Returns a dictionary just like \function{parse_qs()} keys are the field names, each value is a list of values for that field. This is easy to use but not much good if you are expecting megabytes to be uploaded --- in that case, use the \class{FieldStorage} class instead -which is much more flexible. Note that \code{content-type} is the -raw, unparsed contents of the \code{content-type} header. +which is much more flexible. Note that this does not parse nested multipart parts --- use \class{FieldStorage} for that. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{parse_header}{string} -Parse a header like \code{content-type} into a main -content-type and a dictionary of parameters. +Parse a MIME header (such as \code{Content-Type}) into a main +value and a dictionary of parameters. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{test}{} @@ -432,7 +437,7 @@ For example: \begin{verbatim} import sys import traceback -print "Content-type: text/html" +print "Content-Type: text/html" print sys.stderr = sys.stdout try: @@ -454,7 +459,7 @@ built-in modules): \begin{verbatim} import sys sys.stderr = sys.stdout -print "Content-type: text/plain" +print "Content-Type: text/plain" print ...your code here... \end{verbatim} |