Book Image

Flask Framework Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Shalabh Aggarwal
4.3 (4)
Book Image

Flask Framework Cookbook - Third Edition

4.3 (4)
By: Shalabh Aggarwal

Overview of this book

Discover what makes Flask, the lightweight Python web framework, popular, as you delve into its modular design that enables the development of scalable web apps. With this practical guide, you'll explore modern solutions, recommended design patterns, and best practices for Flask web development. Updated to the latest version of Flask and Python, this third edition of the Flask Framework Cookbook moves away from the outdated libraries, updates content to incorporate new coding patterns, and introduces recipes for the latest tools. You'll explore different ways to integrate with GPT to build AI-ready Flask applications. The book starts with an exploration of Flask application configurations and then guides you through working with templates and understanding the ORM and view layers. You’ll also be able to write an admin interface and get to grips with testing using the factory pattern, debugging, and logging errors. Then you’ll discover different ways of using Flask to create, deploy, and manage microservices using AWS, GCP, and Kubernetes. Finally, you’ll gain insights into various deployment and post-deployment techniques for platforms such as Apache, Tornado, and Datadog. By the end of this book, you'll have acquired the knowledge necessary to write Flask applications that cater to a wide range of use cases in the best possible way and scale them using standard industry practices.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Flask Fundamentals
6
Part 2: Flask Deep Dive
12
Part 3: Advanced Flask

Integrating the nose2 library

nose2 is a library that makes testing easier and much more fun. It provides a whole lot of tools to enhance our tests. Although nose2 can be used for multiple purposes, the most important usage remains that of a test collector and runner. nose2 automatically collects tests from Python source files, directories, and packages found in the current working directory. In this recipe, we will focus on how to run individual tests using nose2 rather than the whole bunch of tests every time.

Important

In earlier editions of this book, we used the nose library. It has since not been under active maintenance and can be deemed deprecated. A replacement for it has been created, with the name nose2. This library behaves similarly to nose but is not exactly the same. However, for the purpose of our demonstration, the major functionality remains similar.

Getting ready

First, we need to install the nose2 library:

$ pip install nose2

nose2 has a mechanism...