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by jessaustin
4385 days ago
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You're not the only one; this is also my experience. However, I'm prepared to believe others' claims that there are drawbacks involved with doing this on "large" apps. I wonder whether they mostly value this "all routes in one place" technique for the purpose of documentation, and perhaps a simple Flask helper function that printed out all registered routes would be just as useful for them? |
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Personally I treat the flask web as a really thin layer around my other more complex libraries (the core of the application). I use blueprints to group things together but I still try to make sure each of those is very simple, say - routing, data marshalling and session management - but anything more complex lives somewhere else.
Each function inside your views just gets a little data together and proxies it down to the real application.
As you say, maybe it gets more complex as the app grows in size, but to me that sounds like the app is trying to do too much. Over time I've learnt that thinking of your app as a 'flask application' (django, rails, whatever) means that it will grow in a way that's hard to maintain later.