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A lightweight and highly customizable Python framework for building web applications
Mango is a lightweight Python framework for building web applications. It provides a simple and intuitive way to handle routing, render HTML templates, and serve files. With Mango, you can quickly set up a web server and define routes to handle different HTTP requests. It is made to be accessible and highly modifiable even by beginners to learn and eventually move on to more mature frameworks such as Flask or Bottle. You only need python3 to run Mango and nothing else.
Mango can be easily installed via pip:
pip install mango-framework
from mango import route, run, render, send_json, send_file, get_json, save_file, set_404, set_405, set_static_url, enable_static, set_static_folder, set_static_permissive, load_from_json, set_routes, set_500
@route('/')
def index():
return "Hello, Mango!"
@route('/post')
def post(post):
user = get_json(post)
return f"Hello, {user['name']}!"
@route('/send')
def send():
return send_json({'name':'john'})
@route('/download')
def download():
return send_file('image.jpeg')
### as attachment
@route('/download')
def download():
return send_file('image.jpeg', as_attachment=True)
@route('/render')
def render():
return render('index.html')
### New reactive rendering
@route('/render')
def render():
return render('index.html',{'name':'john'})
@route('/form')
def form(form_data):
name = form_data.get('name')
return f"Hello, {name}!"
@route('/get')
def upload(form_fields, files):
input1 = form_fields.get("input1")
input2 = form_fields.get("input2")
file_item1 = files[0]
if file_item1.filename:
file_path1 = save_file(data=file_item1.file.read(), name=file_item1.filename, path='upload')
file_item2 = files[1]
if file_item2.filename:
file_path2 = save_file(data=file_item2.file.read(), name=file_item2.filename, path='upload')
#returns files in a list, forms in a dict
return "files saved successfully"
set_404("<h1> not here ! </h1>")
## or pass an HTML or any file directly
set_404("404.html")
The page that will be shown if debug_mode
is set to False
and a path is not found, otherwise it will show the included 404 page.
set_405("<h1> Method not allowed ! </h1>")
## or pass an HTML or any file directly
set_405("405.html")
set_500("<h1> Internal Server Error ! </h1>")
## or pass an HTML or any file directly
set_500("500.html")
The page that will be shown if debug_mode
is set to False
and an error occurred, otherwise it will show the included 500 page.
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/static/style.css">
set_static_url("/images")
Default URL is /static. the new link MUST start with / !
enable_static(True) # or False to disable
set_static_folder("static")
set_static_permissive(True) # or False to disable
Defaults to False
, it is used if you want the static handler to be permissive, meaning it will serve any file in the project root without checking if the file is in the static directory or not. Ideal if you want mango to act as a file server or CDN.
def index():
return "Hello, Mango!"
def post(data):
user = get_json(data)
return f"Hello, {user['name']}!"
paths = {
'/' : index,
'/post' : post
}
set_routes(paths)
Seperate the routes to introduce a seperation of concerns similar to django and make mango more scalable.
run(host='localhost', port=8080, debug_mode=True)
Mango 1.2 introduces the ability to configure routes dynamically using a JSON file. This feature significantly simplifies route management by allowing developers to define routes, handlers, and their responses in a JSON format, making your web application easily configurable and adaptable without the need to directly modify the Python code, the included ORM has been removed in favor of third party more robust alternatives such as tinyDB.
Define Routes in JSON: Create a routing.json
file within your project directory. This file will contain all your route definitions in a structured format.
Load Routes: Utilize the load_from_json
function at the start of your application to load the routes defined in the routing.json
file.
Run Your Server: With the routes dynamically loaded, start your Mango server as usual.
Below is an example of how to structure your routing.json
to define various routes:
{
"GET": {
"/": {
"handler": "index",
"return": {
"type": "template",
"name": "index.html",
"context": {
"name": "test",
"time": "11AM"
}
}
},
"/json": {
"handler": "send_json",
"return": {
"type": "json",
"data": {
"name": "test",
"time": "11AM"
}
}
},
"/redirect": {
"handler": "redirect_func",
"return": {
"type": "redirect",
"url": "/json"
}
},
"/plain": {
"handler": "send_plain",
"return": {
"type": "plain",
"data": "Hello World"
}
},
"/file": {
"handler": "send_file_func",
"return": {
"type": "file",
"path": "a.jpg",
"attachment": false
}
},
"/data": {
"handler": "send_data",
"return": {
"type": "data",
"data": "Hello World"
}
}
}
}
To dynamically load the routes from your routing.json
and start the server, include the following code in your application:
data = open("routing.json").read()
json_data_routing = json.loads(data)
load_from_json(json_data_routing)
run()
This enhancement to Mango makes setting up and modifying your server simpler than ever before, promoting rapid development and easier management of web applications through external JSON configurations.
TinyDB is a lightweight, document-oriented database that is perfect for small projects or to be used as a temporary storage. It is written in pure Python and has no external dependencies. The database is stored in a single file, making it easy to manage and share. TinyDB is simple to use and easy to learn, making it an ideal choice for beginners and small projects and its goals closely align with Mango.
PicoCSS is a minimal CSS framework that provides a simple and lightweight way to style your web applications. It is designed to be easy to use and highly customizable, making it a great choice for small to medium-sized projects. PicoCSS is built with simplicity in mind, allowing you to quickly add styles to your web pages without the need for complex or bloated CSS frameworks. It is a perfect match for Mango, as both are designed to be lightweight and easy to use, making them a great combination for building web applications.
FAQs
A lightweight and highly customizable Python framework for building web applications
We found that mango-framework demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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