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It's not the same to POST to an URL than to GET it, DELETE it or PUT it. These actions are fundamentally different. However, Django seems to ignore them in its dispatch mechanism. Basically, one is forced to either ignore HTTP verbs completely or do this on every view:

def my_view(request, arg1, arg2):
    if request.method == 'GET':
        return get_view(request, arg1, arg2)
    if request.method == 'POST':
        return post_view(request, arg1, arg2)
    return http.HttpResponseNotAllowed(['GET', 'POST'])

The few solutions I have found for this in the web (this snippet for verb-based dispatch, or this decorator for verb requirement) are not very elegant as they are clearly just workarounds.

The situation with CherryPy seems to be the same. The only frameworks I know of that get this right are web.py and Google App Engine's.

I see this as a serious design flaw for a web framework. Does anyone agree? Or is it a deliberate decision based on reasons/requirements I ignore?

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3 Answers

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I believe the decision for django was made because usually just GET and POST is enough, and that keeps the framework simpler for its requirements. It is very convenient to just "not care" about which verb was used.

However, there are plenty other frameworks that can do dispatch based on verb. I like werkzeug, it makes easy to define your own dispatch code, so you can dispatch based on whatever you want, to whatever you want.

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Even though usually GET and POST are enough, the number of verbs is not the issue here. I just can't think of a single use case where the controller (called "view" in Django) should do exactly the same for both GET and POST. – martin Aug 10 at 14:01
GET and POST are very common, I agree. However, I still don't see why the default should be to completely ignore the verb. – martin Aug 13 at 0:28
@martin: why not? they're about the same thing. you can easily write an application that doesn't care if the request came as a get or as a post. – nosklo Aug 13 at 1:55
@nosklo: because they are not the same thing at all. cases where the verb could be safely ignored are very strange (i still fail to see a single one). therefore, these frameworks make the most uncommon case (verb doesn't matter) the default, and the most common case (verb matters) an optional, non-standardized feature. i think it should be the other way around. – martin Sep 9 at 9:35
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Because this is not hard to DIY. Just have a dictionary of accepted verbs to functions in each class.

def dispatcher(someObject, request):
    try:
      return someObject.acceptedVerbs[request.method]()
    except:
      return http.HttpResponseNotAllowed(someObject.acceptedVerbs.keys())
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This one looks nice. Any info on how to wire that dispatcher into a simple Django app? – martin Aug 10 at 14:05
I have a utilities file that I include on my more specific views files. Each specific file knows which object to use when calling this dispatcher function. – geowa4 Aug 10 at 14:32
Sorry, I still don't see it clear. How much code (besides your dispatcher function) is necessary to wire an url pattern to a verb-specific handler? Could you add an example? – martin Aug 10 at 14:53
import my_views_utils.py followed later by dispatcher(someHandlerObjectOfYours, request) in the handler function that you define in your urls.py. It's not Rails, but it works just as well. – geowa4 Aug 10 at 15:01
vote up 2 vote down

I can't speak for Django, but in CherryPy, you can have one function per HTTP verb with a single config entry:

request.dispatch = cherrypy.dispatch.MethodDispatcher()

However, I have seen some situations where that's not desirable.

One example would be a hard redirect regardless of verb.

Another case is when the majority of your handlers only handle GET. It's especially annoying in that case to have a thousand page handlers all named 'GET'. It's prettier to express that in a decorator than in a function name:

def allow(*methods):
    methods = list(methods)
    if not methods:
        methods = ['GET', 'HEAD']
    elif 'GET' in methods and 'HEAD' not in methods:
        methods.append('HEAD')
    def wrap(f):
        def inner(*args, **kwargs):
            cherrypy.response.headers['Allow'] = ', '.join(methods)
            if cherrypy.request.method not in methods:
                raise cherrypy.HTTPError(405)
            return f(*args, **kwargs):
        inner.exposed = True
        return inner
    return wrap

class Root:
    @allow()
    def index(self):
        return "Hello"

    cowboy_greeting = "Howdy"

    @allow()
    def cowboy(self):
        return self.cowboy_greeting

    @allow('PUT')
    def cowboyup(self, new_greeting=None):
        self.cowboy_greeting = new_greeting

Another common one I see is looking up data corresponding to the resource in a database, which should happen regardless of verb:

def default(self, id, **kwargs):
    # 404 if no such beast
    thing = Things.get(id=id)
    if thing is None:
        raise cherrypy.NotFound()

    # ...and now switch on method
    if cherrypy.request.method == 'GET': ...

CherryPy tries to not make the decision for you, yet makes it easy (a one-liner) if that's what you want.

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