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I want to be able to get the data sent to my Flask app. I've tried accessing request.data but it is an empty string. How do you access request data?

from flask import request

@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def parse_request():
    data = request.data  # data is empty
    # need posted data here

The answer to this question led me to ask Get raw POST body in Python Flask regardless of Content-Type header next, which is about getting the raw data rather than the parsed data.

24 Answers 24

2157

The docs describe the attributes available on the request object (from flask import request) during a request. In most common cases request.data will be empty because it's used as a fallback:

request.data Contains the incoming request data as string in case it came with a mimetype Flask does not handle.

  • request.args: the key/value pairs in the URL query string
  • request.form: the key/value pairs in the body, from a HTML post form, or JavaScript request that isn't JSON encoded
  • request.files: the files in the body, which Flask keeps separate from form. HTML forms must use enctype=multipart/form-data or files will not be uploaded.
  • request.values: combined args and form, preferring args if keys overlap
  • request.json: parsed JSON data. The request must have the application/json content type, or use request.get_json(force=True) to ignore the content type.

All of these are MultiDict instances (except for json). You can access values using:

  • request.form['name']: use indexing if you know the key exists
  • request.form.get('name'): use get if the key might not exist
  • request.form.getlist('name'): use getlist if the key is sent multiple times and you want a list of values. get only returns the first value.
1
  • 1
    I find that both request.data and request.json are populated when Content-Type is set to application/json in the request. Hence, it looks like it is more than a fallback and is populated by Flask even with mimetypes that it does handle. Please correct me if I am wrong
    – R.S.K
    Jun 7 at 3:53
296

For URL query parameters, use request.args.

search = request.args.get("search")
page = request.args.get("page")

For posted form input, use request.form.

email = request.form.get('email')
password = request.form.get('password')

For JSON posted with content type application/json, use request.get_json().

data = request.get_json()
0
271

To get the raw data, use request.data. This only works if it couldn't be parsed as form data, otherwise it will be empty and request.form will have the parsed data.

from flask import request
request.data
1
  • This behavior has changed now since I am finding that request.data does have the raw data even if it is form data
    – R.S.K
    Jun 8 at 6:36
168

Here's an example of parsing posted JSON data and echoing it back.

from flask import Flask, request, jsonify

app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route('/foo', methods=['POST']) 
def foo():
    data = request.json
    return jsonify(data)

To post JSON with curl:

curl -i -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"userId":"1", "username": "fizz bizz"}' http://localhost:5000/foo

Or to use Postman:

using postman to post JSON

0
85

To get the raw post body regardless of the content type, use request.get_data(). If you use request.data, it calls request.get_data(parse_form_data=True), which will populate the request.form MultiDict and leave data empty.

5
  • 1
    This should really be upvoted more. We can just request.get_data() regardless of whether we received form or json data.
    – R.S.K
    Feb 9, 2022 at 10:30
  • I was looking for this solution
    – user582175
    May 3, 2022 at 7:23
  • Using request.get_data() doesn't work for me when request.method == 'GET': I found that request.args worked. Dec 12, 2022 at 17:25
  • @BradGrissom That's because query strings would never be in request.data; the query string is part of the URL and not the entity body. Aug 11 at 14:29
  • This solution works, and if you need the data in string format you can use request.get_data().decode("utf-8") to convert the bytes to string.
    – Amir Zare
    Aug 30 at 8:29
55

If you post JSON with content type application/json, use request.get_json() to get it in Flask. If the content type is not correct, None is returned. If the data is not JSON, an error is raised.

@app.route("/something", methods=["POST"])
def do_something():
    data = request.get_json()
0
38

To get request.form as a normal dictionary , use request.form.to_dict(flat=False).

To return JSON data for an API, pass it to jsonify.

This example returns form data as JSON data.

@app.route('/form_to_json', methods=['POST'])
def form_to_json():
    data = request.form.to_dict(flat=False)
    return jsonify(data)

Here's an example of POST form data with curl, returning as JSON:

$ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/data -d "name=ivanleoncz&role=Software Developer"
{
  "name": "ivanleoncz", 
  "role": "Software Developer"
}
0
27

You can get request data from

  1. request.form for form data, this includes form and file data,
  2. request.json and request.get_json for JSON data
  3. request.headers for headers
  4. request.args to get query params

They're all like a dictionary, use request.form['name'] if you know the key exists, or request.form.get('name') if it is optional.

0
26

Use request.get_json() to get posted JSON data.

data = request.get_json()
name = data.get('name', '')

Use request.form to get data when submitting a form with the POST method.

name = request.form.get('name', '')

Use request.args to get data passed in the query string of the URL, like when submitting a form with the GET method.

request.args.get("name", "")

request.form etc. are dict-like, use the get method to get a value with a default if it wasn't passed.

25

Import request:

from flask import request

URL query parameters:

name = request.args.get("name")
age = request.args.get("age")

Form Input:

name = request.form.get('name')
age = request.form.get('age')

OR (use indexing if you know the key exists, specify the name of input fields)

name = request.form['name']
age = request.form['age']

JSON Data (for content type application/json)

data = request.get_json()
20

To get JSON posted without the application/json content type, use request.get_json(force=True).

@app.route('/process_data', methods=['POST'])
def process_data():
    req_data = request.get_json(force=True)
    language = req_data['language']
    return 'The language value is: {}'.format(language)
1
  • I was facing this issue, didn't send "application/json" in headres while calling the API
    – Keval
    Jan 18 at 11:37
17

To post JSON with jQuery in JavaScript, use JSON.stringify to dump the data, and set the content type to application/json.

var value_data = [1, 2, 3, 4];

$.ajax({
    type: 'POST',
    url: '/process',
    data: JSON.stringify(value_data),
    contentType: 'application/json',
    success: function (response_data) {
        alert("success");
    }   
});

Parse it in Flask with request.get_json().

data = request.get_json()
15

The raw data is passed in to the Flask application from the WSGI server as request.stream. The length of the stream is in the Content-Length header.

length = request.headers["Content-Length"]
data = request.stream.read(length)

It is usually safer to use request.get_data() instead.

0
14

Here's an example of posting form data to add a user to a database. Check request.method == "POST" to check if the form was submitted. Use keys from request.form to get the form data. Render an HTML template with a <form> otherwise. The fields in the form should have name attributes that match the keys in request.form.

from flask import Flask, request, render_template

app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route("/user/add", methods=["GET", "POST"])
def add_user():
    if request.method == "POST":
        user = User(
            username=request.form["username"],
            email=request.form["email"],
        )
        db.session.add(user)
        db.session.commit()
        return redirect(url_for("index"))

    return render_template("add_user.html")
<form method="post">
    <label for="username">Username</label>
    <input type="text" name="username" id="username">
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input type="email" name="email" id="email">
    <input type="submit">
</form>
0
12

To parse JSON, use request.get_json().

@app.route("/something", methods=["POST"])
def do_something():
    result = handle(request.get_json())
    return jsonify(data=result)
11

When writing a Slack bot, which is supposed to send JSON data, I got a payload where the Content-Type was application/x-www-form-urlencoded.

I tried request.get_json() and it didn't work.

@app.route('/process_data', methods=['POST'])
def process_data():
   req_data = request.get_json(force=True)

Instead I used request.form to get the form data field that contained JSON, then loaded that.

from flask import json

@ app.route('/slack/request_handler', methods=['POST'])
def request_handler():
   req_data = json.loads(request.form["payload"])
10

If the body is recognized as form data, it will be in request.form. If it's JSON, it will be in request.get_json(). Otherwise the raw data will be in request.data. If you're not sure how data will be submitted, you can use an or chain to get the first one with data.

def get_request_data():
    return (
        request.args
        or request.form
        or request.get_json(force=True, silent=True)
        or request.data
    )

request.args contains args parsed from the query string, regardless of what was in the body, so you would remove that from get_request_data() if both it and a body should data at the same time.

9

If the content type is recognized as form data, request.data will parse that into request.form and return an empty string.

To get the raw data regardless of content type, call request.get_data(). request.data calls get_data(parse_form_data=True), while the default is False if you call it directly.

0
5

When posting form data with an HTML form, be sure the input tags have name attributes, otherwise they won't be present in request.form.

@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def index():
    print(request.form)
    return """
<form method="post">
    <input type="text">
    <input type="text" id="txt2">
    <input type="text" name="txt3" id="txt3">  
    <input type="submit">
</form>
"""
ImmutableMultiDict([('txt3', 'text 3')])

Only the txt3 input had a name, so it's the only key present in request.form.

5
@app.route('/addData', methods=['POST'])
def add_data():
     data_in = mongo.db.Data
     id = request.values.get("id")
     name = request.values.get("name")
     newuser = {'id' : id, 'name' : name}
     if voter.find({'id' : id, 'name' : name}).count() > 0:
            return "Data Exists"
     else:
            data_in.insert(newuser)
            return "Data Added"
1

Try this

 json_data = request.form or request.get_json()
 data = dict(json_data)

It'll get both the form and JSON data together and convert it into the dictionary

-2

I just faced the same need. I have to save information in case of any unexpected situation. So, I use the following formula:

Info = "%s/%s/%s" % (request.remote_addr, repr(request), repr(session))

repr(request) will give a string representation of the basic information. You could add user-agent data with: request.headers.get('User-Agent')

I also save the session continent as it could contain valuable information

-4
request.data

This is great to use but remember that it comes in as a string and will need iterated through.

1
  • 8
    Already answered a lot of times, besides iterating over a string makes no sense. Oct 9, 2020 at 12:59
-4

Try - >

from flask import request

@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def parse_request():
    if request.method == 'POST':
       data = request.form.get('data')

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