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I am following this Flask tutorial. We declare routes like @app.route('/') , but no variable in python can contain @ character.
I'm confused that what is @app and where it came from. Here's the code snippet :

from app import app

@app.route('/')
@app.route('/index')
def index():
    return "Hello, World!"
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2 Answers 2

25

The @ is telling Python to decorate the function index() with the decorator defined in app.route().

Basically, a decorator is a function that modifies the behaviour of another function. As a toy example, consider this.

def square(func):
    def inner(x):
        return func(x) ** 2
    return inner

@square
def dbl(x):
    return x * 2 

Now - calling dbl(10) will return not 20, as you'd expect but 400 (20**2) instead.

This is a nice step-by-step. explanation of decorators.

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  • 2
    This concept is also known as a closure. It's a nice way to add more functionality to a function without having to create a class.
    – m1yag1
    Feb 11, 2016 at 15:14
  • 1
    @m1yag1 You just made me finally understand what a closure is useful for, by identification with Python's decorators, thanks ;)
    – JulienD
    Feb 11, 2016 at 22:50
  • 1
    Why is line 3 return func(2) ** 2, should it be return func(x) ** 2 instead?
    – Kingsley
    Dec 21, 2018 at 1:03
18

It is a decorator. When decorated by @app.route('/') (which is a function), calling index() becomes the same as calling app.route('/')(index)().

Here is another link that can explain it, in the python wiki.

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