Given a simple Flask application, I’m just curious about whether there is a proper way to modify a Response in the hooks such as process_response?
e.g. Given:
from flask import Flask, Response
class MyFlask(Flask):
def process_response(self, response):
# edit response data, eg. add "... MORE!", but
# keep eg mimetype, status_code
response.data += "... This is added" # but should I modify `data`?
return response
# or should I:
# return Response(response.data + "... this is also added",
# mimetype=response.mimetype, etc)
app = MyFlask(__name__)
@app.route('/')
def root():
return "abddef"
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
Is it proper to just create a new response each time, or is it canonical to just edit in-place the response parameter and return that modified response?
This may be purely stylistic, but I’m curious – and I haven’t noticed anything in my reading that would indicate the preferred way to do this (even though it’s probably quite common).
Thanks for reading.
From the Flask.process_response docs:
Can be overridden in order to modify the response object before it’s sent to the WSGI server.
The response object is created on flask dispacher mechanism (Flask.full_dispatch_request). So if you want to create response objects under your own way, override Flask.make_reponse. Use Flask.process_response only when the desired modifications can be made using the created response object parameter.