ANNOUNCE: Quixote 0.5.1 released
Quixote 0.5.1 is now available for download from:
http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/quixote/
Quixote is yet another framework for developing Web applications in
Python. The design goals were:
1) To allow easy development of Web applications where the
accent is more on complicated programming logic than
complicated templating.
2) To make the templating language as similar to Python as possible,
in both syntax and semantics. The aim is to make as many of the
skills and structural techniques used in writing regular Python
code applicable to Web applications built using Quixote.
3) No magic. When it's not obvious what to do in
a certain case, Quixote refuses to guess.
If you view a web site as a program, and web pages as subroutines,
Quixote just might be the tool for you. If you view a web site as a
graphic design showcase, and each web page as an individual work of art,
Quixote is probably not what you're looking for.
Quixote was primarily written by Andrew Kuchling, Neil Schemenauer, and
Greg Ward: {amk,nas,gward}@mems-exchange.org.
The Quixote documentation is available online:
http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/quixote/doc/
Support for Quixote is available on the quixote-users@mems-exchange.org
mailing list:
http://mail.mems-exchange.org/mailman/listinfo/quixote-users
CHANGES in Quixote 0.5.1
------------------------
* (incompatible change for anyone doing HTTP upload with Quixote)
Improved support for HTTP upload requests: any HTTP request with
a Content-Type of "multipart/form-data" -- which is generally only
used for uploads -- is now represented by HTTPUploadRequest, a
subclass of HTTPRequest, and the uploaded files themselves are
represented by Upload objects. See doc/upload.txt for details.
* (possible incompatible changes for anyone subclassing Publisher,
or using it for custom purposes)
Various rearrangements and refactoring in the Publisher class.
Added create_request() method, which takes responsibility for
creating the HTTPRequest (or HTTPUploadRequest) object away
from parse_request(). As a consequence, the signature of
parse_request() has changed. Added process_request() method.
Changed publish() so it catches exceptions coming from either
parse_request() or process_request(). Consult the source code
(publish.py) for details.
* A new subpackage, quixote.server, is intended for code that
publishes a Quixote application through HTTP, making it possible
to run Quixote applications without having to configure Apache or
some other full-blown Web server. Right now there's only an
implementation on top of Medusa; contributions of support for
Python's BaseHTTPServer, Twisted, or other frameworks would be
welcome.
* Modified SessionManager.maintain_session() so it explicitly removes
a session if that session used to have useful info (ie. exists in
the session manager), but no longer does (patch by Jon Corbet).
* Make the PTL compiler a bit smarter about recognizing "template"
lines; PTL code should now be able to use 'template' as an
identifier, which is handy when converting existing Python code
to PTL.
* Replaced HTTPRequest.redirect() with a cleaner, more general
version supplied by Andreas Kostyrka
participants (1)
-
Greg Ward