This is the ninth installment of the Flask Mega-Tutorial series, in which I’m going to tell you how to paginate lists of database entries.
For your reference, below is a list of the articles in this series.
- Chapter 1: Hello, World!
- Chapter 2: Templates
- Chapter 3: Web Forms
- Chapter 4: Database
- Chapter 5: User Logins
- Chapter 6: Profile Page and Avatars
- Chapter 7: Error Handling
- Chapter 8: Followers
- Chapter 9: Pagination (this article)
- Chapter 10: Email Support
- Chapter 11: Facelift
- Chapter 12: Dates and Times
- Chapter 13: I18n and L10n
- Chapter 14: Ajax
- Chapter 15: A Better Application Structure
- Chapter 16: Full-Text Search
- Chapter 17: Deployment on Linux
- Chapter 18: Deployment on Heroku
- Chapter 19: Deployment on Docker Containers
- Chapter 20: Some JavaScript Magic
- Chapter 21: User Notifications
- Chapter 22: Background Jobs
- Chapter 23: Application Programming Interfaces (APIs)
Note 1: If you are looking for the legacy version of this tutorial, it’s here.
Note 2: If you would like to support my work on this blog, or just don’t have patience to wait for weekly articles, I am offering the complete version of this tutorial packaged as an ebook or a set of videos. For more information, visit courses.miguelgrinberg.com.
In Chapter 8 I have made several database changes necessary to support the “follower” paradigm that is so popular with social networks. With that functionality in place, I’m ready to remove the last piece of scaffolding that I have put in place in the beginning, the fake posts. In this chapter the application will start accepting blog posts from users, and also deliver them in the home and profile pages.
The GitHub links for this chapter are: Browse, Zip, Diff.
Submission of Blog Posts
Let’s start with something simple. The home page needs to have a form in which users can type new posts. First I create a form class:
app/forms.py: Blog submission form.
class PostForm(FlaskForm):
post = TextAreaField('Say something', validators=[
DataRequired(), Length(min=1, max=140)])
submit = SubmitField('Submit')
Next, I can add this form to the template for the main page of the application:
app/templates/index.html: Post submission form in index template
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<h1>Hi, {{ current_user.username }}!</h1>
<form action="" method="post">
{{ form.hidden_tag() }}
<p>
{{ form.post.label }}<br>
{{ form.post(cols=32, rows=4) }}<br>
{% for error in form.post.errors %}
<span style="color: red;">[{{ error }}]</span>
{% endfor %}
</p>
<p>{{ form.submit() }}</p>
</form>
{% for post in posts %}
<p>
{{ post.author.username }} says: <b>{{ post.body }}</b>
</p>
{% endfor %}
{% endblock %}
The changes in this template are similar to how previous forms were handled. The final part is to add the form creation and handling in the view function:
app/routes.py: Post submission form in index view function.
from app.forms import PostForm
from app.models import Post
@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@app.route('/index', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@login_required
def index():
form = PostForm()
if form.validate_on_submit():
post = Post(body=form.post.data, author=current_user)
db.session.add(post)
db.session.commit()
flash('Your post is now live!')
return redirect(url_for('index'))
posts = [
{
'author': {'username': 'John'},
'body': 'Beautiful day in Portland!'
},
{
'author': {'username': 'Susan'},
'body': 'The Avengers movie was so cool!'
}
]
return render_template("index.html", title='Home Page', form=form,
posts=posts)
Let’s review the changes in this view function one by one:
- I’m now importing the
Post
andPostForm
classes - I accept
POST
requests in both routes associated with theindex
view function in addition toGET
requests, since this view function will now receive form data. - The form processing logic inserts a new
Post
record into the database. - The template receives the
form
object as an additional argument, so that it can render the text field.
Before I continue, I wanted to mention something important related to processing of web forms. Notice how after I process the form data, I end the request by issuing a redirect to the home page. I could have easily skipped the redirect and allowed the function to continue down into the template rendering part, since this is already the index view function.
So, why the redirect? It is a standard practice to respond to a POST
request generated by a web form submission with a redirect. This helps mitigate an annoyance with how the refresh command is implemented in web browsers. All the web browser does when you hit the refresh key is to re-issue the last request. If a POST
request with a form submission returns a regular response, then a refresh will re-submit the form. Because this is unexpected, the browser is going to ask the user to confirm the duplicate submission, but most users will not understand what the browser is asking them. But if a POST
request is answered with a redirect, the browser is now instructed to send a GET
request to grab the page indicated in the redirect, so now the last request is not a POST
request anymore, and the refresh command works in a more predictable way.
This simple trick is called the Post/Redirect/Get pattern. It avoids inserting duplicate posts when a user inadvertently refreshes the page after submitting a web form.
Displaying Blog Posts
If you recall, I created a couple of fake blog posts that I’ve been displaying in the home page for a long time. These fake objects are created explicitly in the index
view function as a simple Python list:
posts = [
{
'author': {'username': 'John'},
'body': 'Beautiful day in Portland!'
},
{
'author': {'username': 'Susan'},
'body': 'The Avengers movie was so cool!'
}
]
But now I have the followed_posts()
method in the User
model that returns a query for the posts that a given user wants to see. So now I can replace the fake posts with real posts:
app/routes.py: Display real posts in home page.
@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@app.route('/index', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@login_required
def index():
# ...
posts = current_user.followed_posts().all()
return render_template("index.html", title='Home Page', form=form,
posts=posts)
The followed_posts
method of the User
class returns a SQLAlchemy query object that is configured to grab the posts the user is interested in from the database. Calling all()
on this query triggers its execution, with the return value being a list with all the results. So I end up with a structure that is very much alike the one with fake posts that I have been using until now. It’s so close that the template does not even need to change.
Making It Easier to Find Users to Follow
As I’m sure you noticed, the application as it is does not do a great job at letting users find other users to follow. In fact, there is actually no way to see what other users are there at all. I’m going to address that with a few simple changes.
I’m going to create a new page that I’m going to call the “Explore” page. This page will work like the home page, but instead of only showing posts from followed users, it will show a global post stream from all users. Here is the new explore view function:
app/routes.py: Explore view function.
@app.route('/explore')
@login_required
def explore():
posts = Post.query.order_by(Post.timestamp.desc()).all()
return render_template('index.html', title='Explore', posts=posts)
Did you notice something odd in this view function? The render_template()
call references the index.html template, which I’m using in the main page of the application. Since this page is going to be very similar to the main page, I decided to reuse the template. But one difference with the main page is that in the explore page I do not want to have a form to write blog posts, so in this view function I did not include the form
argument in the template call.
To prevent the index.html template from crashing when it tries to render a web form that does not exist, I’m going to add a conditional that only renders the form if it is defined:
app/templates/index.html: Make the blog post submission form optional.
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<h1>Hi, {{ current_user.username }}!</h1>
{% if form %}
<form action="" method="post">
...
</form>
{% endif %}
...
{% endblock %}
I’m also going to add a link to this new page in the navigation bar:
app/templates/base.html: Link to explore page in navigation bar.
<a href="{{ url_for('explore') }}">Explore</a>
Remember the _post.html sub-template that I have introduced in Chapter 6 to render blog posts in the user profile page? This was a small template that was included from the user profile page template, and was separate so that it can also be used from other templates. I’m now going to make a small improvement to it, which is to show the username of the blog post author as a link:
app/templates/_post.html: Show link to author in blog posts.
<table>
<tr valign="top">
<td><img src="{{ post.author.avatar(36) }}"></td>
<td>
<a href="{{ url_for('user', username=post.author.username) }}">
{{ post.author.username }}
</a>
says:<br>{{ post.body }}
</td>
</tr>
</table>
I can now use this sub-template to render blog posts in the home and explore pages:
app/templates/index.html: Use blog post sub-template.
...
{% for post in posts %}
{% include '_post.html' %}
{% endfor %}
...
The sub-template expects a variable named post
to exist, and that is how the loop variable in the index template is named, so that works perfectly.
With these small changes, the usability of the application has improved considerably. Now a user can visit the explore page to read blog posts from unknown users and based on those posts find new users to follow, which can be done by simply clicking on a username to access the profile page. Amazing, right?
At this point I suggest you try the application once again, so that you experience these last user interface improvements.
Pagination of Blog Posts
The application is looking better than ever, but showing all of the followed posts in the home page is going to become a problem sooner rather than later. What happens if a user has a thousand followed posts? Or a million? As you can imagine, managing such a large list of posts will be extremely slow and inefficient.
To address that problem, I’m going to paginate the post list. This means that initially I’m going to show just a limited number of posts at a time, and include links to navigate through the entire list of posts. Flask-SQLAlchemy supports pagination natively with the paginate()
query method. If for example, I want to get the first twenty followed posts of the user, I can replace the all()
call that terminates the query with:
>>> user.followed_posts().paginate(1, 20, False).items
The paginate
method can be called on any query object from Flask-SQLAlchemy. It takes three arguments:
- the page number, starting from 1
- the number of items per page
- an error flag. If
True
, when an out of range page is requested a 404 error will be automatically returned to the client. IfFalse
, an empty list will be returned for out of range pages.
The return value from paginate
is a Pagination
object. The items
attribute of this object contains the list of items in the requested page. There are other useful things in the Pagination
object that I will discuss later.
Now let’s think about how I can implement pagination in the index()
view function. I can start by adding a configuration item to the application that determines how many items will be displayed per page.
config.py: Posts per page configuration.
class Config(object):
# ...
POSTS_PER_PAGE = 3
It is a good idea to have these application-wide “knobs” that can change behaviors in the configuration file, because then I can go to a single place to make adjustments. In the final application I will of course use a larger number than three items per page, but for testing it is useful to work with small numbers.
Next, I need to decide how the page number is going to be incorporated into application URLs. A fairly common way is to use a query string argument to specify an optional page number, defaulting to page 1 if it is not given. Here are some example URLs that show how I’m going to implement this:
- Page 1, implicit: http://localhost:5000/index
- Page 1, explicit: http://localhost:5000/index?page=1
- Page 3: http://localhost:5000/index?page=3
To access arguments given in the query string, I can use the Flask’s request.args
object. You have seen this already in Chapter 5, where I implemented user login URLs from Flask-Login that can include a next
query string argument.
Below you can see how I added pagination to the home and explore view functions:
app/routes.py: Followers association table
@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@app.route('/index', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@login_required
def index():
# ...
page = request.args.get('page', 1, type=int)
posts = current_user.followed_posts().paginate(
page, app.config['POSTS_PER_PAGE'], False)
return render_template('index.html', title='Home', form=form,
posts=posts.items)
@app.route('/explore')
@login_required
def explore():
page = request.args.get('page', 1, type=int)
posts = Post.query.order_by(Post.timestamp.desc()).paginate(
page, app.config['POSTS_PER_PAGE'], False)
return render_template("index.html", title='Explore', posts=posts.items)
With these changes, the two routes determine the page number to display, either from the page
query string argument or a default of 1, and then use the paginate()
method to retrieve only the desired page of results. The POSTS_PER_PAGE
configuration item that determines the page size is accessed through the app.config
object.
Note how easy these changes are, and how little code is affected each time a change is made. I am trying to write each part of the application without making any assumptions about how the other parts work, and this enables me to write modular and robust applications that are easier to extend and to test, and are less likely to fail or have bugs.
Go ahead and try the pagination support. First make sure you have more than three blog posts. This is easier to see in the explore page, which shows posts from all users. You are now going to see just the three most recent posts. If you want to see the next three, type http://localhost:5000/explore?page=2 in your browser’s address bar.
Page Navigation
The next change is to add links at the bottom of the blog post list that allow users to navigate to the next and/or previous pages. Remember that I mentioned that the return value from a paginate()
call is an object of a Pagination
class from Flask-SQLAlchemy? So far, I have used the items
attribute of this object, which contains the list of items retrieved for the selected page. But this object has a few other attributes that are useful when building pagination links:
has_next
: True if there is at least one more page after the current onehas_prev
: True if there is at least one more page before the current onenext_num
: page number for the next pageprev_num
: page number for the previous page
With these four elements, I can generate next and previous page links and pass them down to the templates for rendering:
app/routes.py: Next and previous page links.
@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@app.route('/index', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
@login_required
def index():
# ...
page = request.args.get('page', 1, type=int)
posts = current_user.followed_posts().paginate(
page, app.config['POSTS_PER_PAGE'], False)
next_url = url_for('index', page=posts.next_num) \
if posts.has_next else None
prev_url = url_for('index', page=posts.prev_num) \
if posts.has_prev else None
return render_template('index.html', title='Home', form=form,
posts=posts.items, next_url=next_url,
prev_url=prev_url)
@app.route('/explore')
@login_required
def explore():
page = request.args.get('page', 1, type=int)
posts = Post.query.order_by(Post.timestamp.desc()).paginate(
page, app.config['POSTS_PER_PAGE'], False)
next_url = url_for('explore', page=posts.next_num) \
if posts.has_next else None
prev_url = url_for('explore', page=posts.prev_num) \
if posts.has_prev else None
return render_template("index.html", title='Explore', posts=posts.items,
next_url=next_url, prev_url=prev_url)
The next_url
and prev_url
in these two view functions are going to be set to a URL returned by url_for()
only if there is a page in that direction. If the current page is at one of the ends of the collection of posts, then the has_next
or has_prev
attributes of the Pagination
object will be False
, and in that case the link in that direction will be set to None
.
One interesting aspect of the url_for()
function that I haven’t discussed before is that you can add any keyword arguments to it, and if the names of those arguments are not referenced in the URL directly, then Flask will include them in the URL as query arguments.
The pagination links are being set to the index.html template, so now let’s render them on the page, right below the post list:
app/templates/index.html: Render pagination links on the template.
...
{% for post in posts %}
{% include '_post.html' %}
{% endfor %}
{% if prev_url %}
<a href="{{ prev_url }}">Newer posts</a>
{% endif %}
{% if next_url %}
<a href="{{ next_url }}">Older posts</a>
{% endif %}
...
This change adds two links below the post list on both the index and explore pages. The first link is labeled “Newer posts”, and it points to the previous page (keep in mind I’m showing posts sorted by newest first, so the first page is the one with the newest content). The second link is labeled “Older posts” and points to the next page of posts. If any of these two links is None
, then it is omitted from the page, through a conditional.
Pagination in the User Profile Page
The changes for the index page are sufficient for now. However, there is also a list of posts in the user profile page, which shows only posts from the owner of the profile. To be consistent, the user profile page should be changed to match the pagination style of the index page.
I begin by updating the user profile view function, which still had a list of fake post objects in it.
app/routes.py: Pagination in the user profile view function.
@app.route('/user/<username>')
@login_required
def user(username):
user = User.query.filter_by(username=username).first_or_404()
page = request.args.get('page', 1, type=int)
posts = user.posts.order_by(Post.timestamp.desc()).paginate(
page, app.config['POSTS_PER_PAGE'], False)
next_url = url_for('user', username=user.username, page=posts.next_num) \
if posts.has_next else None
prev_url = url_for('user', username=user.username, page=posts.prev_num) \
if posts.has_prev else None
form = EmptyForm()
return render_template('user.html', user=user, posts=posts.items,
next_url=next_url, prev_url=prev_url, form=form)
To get the list of posts from the user, I take advantage of the fact that the user.posts
relationship is a query that is already set up by SQLAlchemy as a result of the db.relationship()
definition in the User
model. I take this query and add a order_by()
clause so that I get the newest posts first, and then do the pagination exactly like I did for the posts in the index and explore pages. Note that the pagination links that are generated by the url_for()
function need the extra username
argument, because they are pointing back at the user profile page, which has this username as a dynamic component of the URL.
Finally, the changes to the user.html template are identical to those I made on the index page:
app/templates/user.html: Pagination links in the user profile template.
...
{% for post in posts %}
{% include '_post.html' %}
{% endfor %}
{% if prev_url %}
<a href="{{ prev_url }}">Newer posts</a>
{% endif %}
{% if next_url %}
<a href="{{ next_url }}">Older posts</a>
{% endif %}
After you are done experiment with the pagination feature, you can set the POSTS_PER_PAGE
configuration item to a more reasonable value:
config.py: Posts per page configuration.
class Config(object):
# ...
POSTS_PER_PAGE = 25