If you look at the login route handler in the code you linked you'll see that it uses request.form
to get out two variables, 'username'
and 'password'
:
@app.route("/login/", methods=["GET", "POST"])
def login_page():
"""
Web Page to Display Login Form and process form.
"""
if request.method == "POST":
user = User.get(request.form['username'])
#If we found a user based on username then compare that the submitted
#password matches the password in the database. The password is stored
#is a slated hash format, so you must hash the password before comparing
#it.
if user and hash_pass(request.form['password']) == user.password:
login_user(user, remember=True)
return redirect(request.args.get("next") or "/")
return render_template("login.html")
The simplest way to do this would be with the following HTML:
<form action="/login/" method="POST">
<input name="username" placeholder="username">
<input type="password" name="password" placeholder="password">
<input type="submit" value="Login">
</form>
This will not re-populate the username if the user mis-types their username or password, nor will it give the user any indication that they failed to login. They will just see the login form again. However, this is just some example code, so it's understandable that the author chose to leave out useful code that would obscure the point he was trying to make.
/login
route handler gets username and password?