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diff --git a/app/static/doc/flask-docs/_sources/foreword.txt b/app/static/doc/flask-docs/_sources/foreword.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..10b886b --- /dev/null +++ b/app/static/doc/flask-docs/_sources/foreword.txt @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +Foreword +======== + +Read this before you get started with Flask. This hopefully answers some +questions about the purpose and goals of the project, and when you +should or should not be using it. + +What does "micro" mean? +----------------------- + +To me, the "micro" in microframework refers not only to the simplicity and +small size of the framework, but also the fact that it does not make much +decisions for you. While Flask does pick a templating engine for you, we +won't make such decisions for your datastore or other parts. + +For us however the term “micro” does not mean that the whole implementation +has to fit into a single Python file. + +One of the design decisions with Flask was that simple tasks should be +simple and not take up a lot of code and yet not limit yourself. Because +of that we took a few design choices that some people might find +surprising or unorthodox. For example, Flask uses thread-local objects +internally so that you don't have to pass objects around from function to +function within a request in order to stay threadsafe. While this is a +really easy approach and saves you a lot of time, it might also cause some +troubles for very large applications because changes on these thread-local +objects can happen anywhere in the same thread. In order to solve these +problems we don't hide the thread locals for you but instead embrace them +and provide you with a lot of tools to make it as pleasant as possible to +work with them. + +Flask is also based on convention over configuration, which means that +many things are preconfigured. For example, by convention, templates and +static files are in subdirectories within the Python source tree of the +application. While this can be changed you usually don't have to. + +The main reason however why Flask is called a "microframework" is the idea +to keep the core simple but extensible. There is no database abstraction +layer, no form validation or anything else where different libraries +already exist that can handle that. However Flask knows the concept of +extensions that can add this functionality into your application as if it +was implemented in Flask itself. There are currently extensions for +object relational mappers, form validation, upload handling, various open +authentication technologies and more. + +Since Flask is based on a very solid foundation there is not a lot of code +in Flask itself. As such it's easy to adapt even for lage applications +and we are making sure that you can either configure it as much as +possible by subclassing things or by forking the entire codebase. If you +are interested in that, check out the :ref:`becomingbig` chapter. + +If you are curious about the Flask design principles, head over to the +section about :ref:`design`. + +Web Development is Dangerous +---------------------------- + +I'm not joking. Well, maybe a little. If you write a web +application, you are probably allowing users to register and leave their +data on your server. The users are entrusting you with data. And even if +you are the only user that might leave data in your application, you still +want that data to be stored securely. + +Unfortunately, there are many ways the security of a web application can be +compromised. Flask protects you against one of the most common security +problems of modern web applications: cross-site scripting (XSS). Unless +you deliberately mark insecure HTML as secure, Flask and the underlying +Jinja2 template engine have you covered. But there are many more ways to +cause security problems. + +The documentation will warn you about aspects of web development that +require attention to security. Some of these security concerns +are far more complex than one might think, and we all sometimes underestimate +the likelihood that a vulnerability will be exploited, until a clever +attacker figures out a way to exploit our applications. And don't think +that your application is not important enough to attract an attacker. +Depending on the kind of attack, chances are that automated bots are +probing for ways to fill your database with spam, links to malicious +software, and the like. + +So always keep security in mind when doing web development. + +The Status of Python 3 +---------------------- + +Currently the Python community is in the process of improving libraries to +support the new iteration of the Python programming language. While the +situation is greatly improving there are still some issues that make it +hard for us to switch over to Python 3 just now. These problems are +partially caused by changes in the language that went unreviewed for too +long, partially also because we have not quite worked out how the lower +level API should change for the unicode differences in Python3. + +Werkzeug and Flask will be ported to Python 3 as soon as a solution for +the changes is found, and we will provide helpful tips how to upgrade +existing applications to Python 3. Until then, we strongly recommend +using Python 2.6 and 2.7 with activated Python 3 warnings during +development. If you plan on upgrading to Python 3 in the near future we +strongly recommend that you read `How to write forwards compatible +Python code <http://lucumr.pocoo.org/2011/1/22/forwards-compatible-python/>`_. |