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Half of my Flask routes requires a variable say, /<variable>/add or /<variable>/remove. How do I create links to those locations?

url_for() takes one argument for the function to route to but I can't add arguments?

6 Answers 6

398

It takes keyword arguments for the variables:

url_for('add', variable=foo)
url_for('remove', variable=foo)

The flask-server would have functions:

@app.route('/<variable>/add', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def add(variable):

@app.route('/<variable>/remove', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def remove(variable):
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  • 3
    But the problem is how 'foo' is beyond the scope if it's a variable from Python. Then, how do you solve it?
    – user9724045
    Aug 2, 2018 at 2:04
  • 13
    Just so that it is clearer, if you have @app.route("/<a>/<b>") and def function(a,b): ... as its function, then you should use url_for and specify its keyword arguments like this: url_for('function', a='somevalue', b='anothervalue') May 28, 2020 at 7:30
  • This is also explained in the quickstart: flask.palletsprojects.com/en/2.2.x/quickstart/… Jan 26, 2023 at 21:27
181

url_for in Flask is used for creating a URL to prevent the overhead of having to change URLs throughout an application (including in templates). Without url_for, if there is a change in the root URL of your app then you have to change it in every page where the link is present.

Syntax: url_for('name of the function of the route','parameters (if required)')

It can be used as:

@app.route('/index')
@app.route('/')
def index():
    return 'you are in the index page'

Now if you have a link the index page:you can use this:

<a href={{ url_for('index') }}>Index</a>

You can do a lot o stuff with it, for example:

# int has been used as a filter so that only integer can be passed in the url, otherwise it will give a 404 error
@app.route('/questions/<int:question_id>')
def find_question(question_id):  
    return ('you asked for question{0}'.format(question_id))

For the above we can use:

<a href = {{ url_for('find_question' ,question_id=1) }}>Question 1</a>

Like this you can simply pass the parameters!

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  • 1
    I have a question, in the first example, the index method was passed as a string while in the second method, the find_question is being passed as variable. Why? Mar 26, 2017 at 10:05
  • 1
    @AnandTyagi Is this what you mean? URL routing
    – Tony Chou
    Dec 3, 2017 at 6:38
  • 11
    @आनंद if variable you do: {{ url_for('find_question' ,question_id=question.id) }} and not {{ url_for('find_question' ,question_id={{question.id}}) }} Apr 20, 2020 at 8:21
  • how to hash the int parameter?
    – Django
    Mar 26, 2021 at 11:01
52

Refer to the Flask API document for flask.url_for()

Other sample snippets of usage for linking js or css to your template are below.

<script src="{{ url_for('static', filename='jquery.min.js') }}"></script>

<link rel=stylesheet type=text/css href="{{ url_for('static', filename='style.css') }}">
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Templates:

Pass function name and argument.

<a href="{{ url_for('get_blog_post',id = blog.id)}}">{{blog.title}}</a>

View,function

@app.route('/blog/post/<string:id>',methods=['GET'])
def get_blog_post(id):
    return id
1

You need to add function means that the page you want to render that function whould be added inside the url_for(function name). It will redirect to that function and the page will render accordingly.

1

If this can help, you can override the static folder when declaring your flask app.

app = Flask(__name__,
            static_folder='/path/to/static',
            template_folder='/path/to/templates')

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