An extension that includes Twitter's Bootstrap in your project, without any boilerplate code.
Project description
Flask-Bootstrap packages Twitter’s Bootstrap into an extension that mostly consists of a blueprint named ‘bootstrap’. It can also create links to serve Bootstrap from a CDN.
Usage
Here is an example:
from flask.ext.bootstrap import Bootstrap [...] Bootstrap(app)
This makes some new templates available, mainly bootstrap_base.html and bootstrap_responsive.html. These are blank pages that include all bootstrap resources, and have predefined blocks where you can put your content. The core block to alter is body_content, otherwise see the source of the template for more possiblities.
The url-endpoint bootstrap.static is available for refering to Bootstrap resources, but usually, this isn’t needed. A bit better is using the bootstrap_find_resource template filter, which will CDN settings into account.
Macros
A few macros are available to make your life easier. These need to be imported (I recommend create your own “base.html” template that extends one of the bootstrap base templates first and including the the macros there).
An example “base.html”:
{% extends "bootstrap_responsive.html" %} {% import "bootstrap_wtf.html" as wtf %}
Forms
The bootstrap_wtf template contains macros to help you output forms quickly. The most basic way is using them as an aid to create a form by hand:
<form class="form form-horizontal" method="post"> {{ form.hidden_tag() }} {{ wtf.form_errors(form, "only") }} {{ wtf.horizontal_field(form.field1) }} {{ wtf.horizontal_field(form.field2) }} <div class="form-actions"> <button name="action_save" type="submit" class="btn btn-primary">Save changes</button> </div> </form>
However, often you just want to get a form done quickly and have no need for intense fine-tuning:
{{ wtf.quick_form(form) }}
Configuration options
There are a few configuration options used by the templates:
Option |
Default |
|
---|---|---|
BOOTSTRAP_USE_MINIFIED |
True |
Whether or not to use the minified versions of the css/js files. |
BOOTSTRAP_JQUERY_VERSION |
'1' |
This version of jQuery is included in the template via Google CDN. Also honors BOOTSTRAP_USE_MINIFIED. Set this to None to not include jQuery at all. Note that non-minified Bootstrap resources are sometimes missing on bootstrapcdn, so it is best not to use it without turning on BOOTSTRAP_USE_MINIFIED. |
BOOTSTRAP_HTML5_SHIM |
True |
Include the default IE-fixes that are usually included when using bootstrap. |
BOOTSTRAP_GOOGLE_ANALYTICS_ACCOUNT |
None |
If set, include Google Analytics boilerplate using this account. |
BOOTSTRAP_USE_CDN |
False |
If True, Bootstrap resources will no be served from the local app instance, but will use a Content Delivery Network instead (configured by BOOTSTRAP_CDN_BASEURL). |
BOOTSTRAP_CDN_BASEURL |
A dictionary set up with URLs to cdnjs.com. |
The URLs to which Bootstrap and other filenames are appended when using a CDN. |
BOOTSTRAP_CDN_PREFER_SSL |
True |
If the BOOTSTRAP_CDN_BASEURL starts with //, prepend 'https:' to it. |
BOOTSTRAP_FONTAWESOME |
False |
If True, FontAwesome will be enabled. |
BOOTSTRAP_CUSTOM_CSS |
False |
If True, no Bootstrap CSS files will be loaded. Use this if you compile a custom css file that already includes bootstrap. |
BOOTSTRAP_QUERYSTRING_REVVING |
True |
If True, will apppend a querystring with the current version to all static resources served locally. This ensures that upon upgrading Flask-Bootstrap, these resources are refreshed. |
Installation
Either install from github using pip or from PyPI.
A note on versioning
Flask-Bootstrap tries to keep some track of Twitter’s Bootstrap releases. Versioning is usually in the form of Bootstrap version - Flask-Bootstrap iteration. For example, a version of 2.0.3-2 bundles Bootstrap version 2.0.3 and is the second release of Flask-Bootstrap containing that version.
If you need to rely on your templates not changing, simply pin the version in your setup.py.
FAQ
Why do I have undesired auto-escapes in my template output?
Make sure your templates end in .htm, .html, .xml or .xhtml. Flask sets the Jinja2-autoescape mode depending on the template file extension (see this StackOverflow question for more information).
General convention in Flask applications is to name your HTML-templates .html though.
How can I add custom javascript to the template?
Use Jinja2’s super() in conjunction with the bootstrap_js_bottom block. The super-function adds the contents of a block from the parent template, that way you can even decide if you want to include it before or after jQuery/bootstrap. Example:
{% block bootstrap_js_bottom %} {{super()}} <script src="my_app_code.js"> {% endblock %}
How do I serve the static files in deployment?
Flask-Bootstrap is not special in the sense that it simply adds a blueprint named bootstrap. The static files map to a specific URL-prefix (per default static/bootstrap and are served from a specific directory found in your virtualenv installation (e.g. lib/python2.7/site-packages/flask_bootstrap/static), so a traditional setup would be setting up your webserver to serve this address from the mentioned directory.
A more elegant approach is having a cache in front of the WSGI server that respects Cache-Control headers. Per default, Flask will serve static files with an expiration time of 12 hours (you can change this value using the SEND_FILE_MAX_AGE_DEFAULT), which should be sufficient.
For this approach nginx (or, if you prefer, Varnish) or their cloud-service based equivalents should suffice. Flask-Bootstrap 2.3.2.2 supports this by offering querystring revving (see BOOTSTRAP_QUERYSTRING_REVVING) to ensure newer Bootstrap versions are served when you upgrade Flask-Bootstrap.
CHANGES
The following changes could have possibly been not backwards compatible:
2.1.0-1
New upstream release: 2.1.0.
Changed the default version of jQuery from 1.7.2 to just 1. This means that the latest 1.x.x version of jQuery will be pulled.
2.1.1-1
WTForms generated HTML code is now considered safe. This allows Flask-WTF’s RecaptchaField to work with quick_form.
2.1.1-2
There is no longer a self.app on Flask-Bootstrap. The extension can be shared by any number of applications using init_app() (though the old __init__() signature is kept for backward compatibiliy).
2.2.1-1
FontAwesome is now supported as well, can also be loaded from bootstrapCDN. Set BOOTSTRAP_FONTAWESOME to True to enable it.
BOOTSTRAP_CDN_BASEURL is now a dictionary for multiple CDNs (i.e. Bootstrap, FontAwesome can use different base URLs). This will break any code that relied on setting BOOTSTRAP_CDN_BASEURL.
2.2.2-1
FontAwesome now version 3.0 instead of 2.0.
The navbar()-macro is gone. It was accidentally committed and never did anything useful, so this hopefully won’t concern anyone.
2.3.0-2
2.3.2.1
Slight change in versioning (dot instead of hyphen for the Flask-Bootstrap release).
2.3.2.2
html5-shim is loaded using a protocol-relative URL
Rendering of RadioField changed (see sample app).
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