Book Image

Flask Framework Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Shalabh Aggarwal
Book Image

Flask Framework Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Shalabh Aggarwal

Overview of this book

Flask, the lightweight Python web framework, is popular thanks to its powerful modular design that lets you build scalable web apps. With this recipe-based guide, you’ll explore modern solutions and best practices for Flask web development. Updated to the latest version of Flask and Python 3, this second edition of Flask Framework Cookbook moves away from some of the old and obsolete libraries and introduces new recipes on cutting-edge technologies. You’ll discover different ways of using Flask to create, deploy, and manage microservices. This Flask Python book starts by covering the different configurations that a Flask application can make use of, and then helps you work with templates and learn about the ORM and view layers. You’ll also be able to write an admin interface and get to grips with debugging and logging errors. Finally, you’ll learn a variety of deployment and post-deployment techniques for platforms such as Apache, Tornado, and Heroku. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained all the knowledge you need to confidently write Flask applications and scale them using standard industry practices.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Using mocking to avoid real API access

We are aware of how testing works, but now let's say we have a third-party application/service integrated via API calls with our application. It would not be a great idea to make calls to this application/service every time tests are run. Sometimes, these can be paid, too, and making calls during tests cannot only be expensive, but also affect the statistics of that service. Mocking plays a very important role in such scenarios. The simplest example of this can be mocking SMTP for emails. In this recipe, we will integrate our application with the geoip library and then test it via mocking.

Getting ready

In Python 3, mock has been included as a standard package in the unittest library...