How are POST and GET variables handled in Python?
Solution 1:
suppose you're posting a html form with this:
<input type="text" name="username">
If using raw cgi:
import cgi
form = cgi.FieldStorage()
print form["username"]
If using Django, Pylons, Flask or Pyramid:
print request.GET['username'] # for GET form method
print request.POST['username'] # for POST form method
Using Turbogears, Cherrypy:
from cherrypy import request
print request.params['username']
Web.py:
form = web.input()
print form.username
Werkzeug:
print request.form['username']
If using Cherrypy or Turbogears, you can also define your handler function taking a parameter directly:
def index(self, username):
print username
Google App Engine:
class SomeHandler(webapp2.RequestHandler):
def post(self):
name = self.request.get('username') # this will get the value from the field named username
self.response.write(name) # this will write on the document
So you really will have to choose one of those frameworks.
Solution 2:
I know this is an old question. Yet it's surprising that no good answer was given.
First of all the question is completely valid without mentioning the framework. The CONTEXT is a PHP language equivalence. Although there are many ways to get the query string parameters in Python, the framework variables are just conveniently populated. In PHP, $_GET
and $_POST
are also convenience variables. They are parsed from QUERY_URI and php://input respectively.
In Python, these functions would be os.getenv('QUERY_STRING')
and sys.stdin.read()
. Remember to import os and sys modules.
We have to be careful with the word "CGI" here, especially when talking about two languages and their commonalities when interfacing with a web server. 1. CGI, as a protocol, defines the data transport mechanism in the HTTP protocol. 2. Python can be configured to run as a CGI-script in Apache. 3. The CGI module in Python offers some convenience functions.
Since the HTTP protocol is language-independent, and that Apache's CGI extension is also language-independent, getting the GET and POST parameters should bear only syntax differences across languages.
Here's the Python routine to populate a GET dictionary:
GET={}
args=os.getenv("QUERY_STRING").split('&')
for arg in args:
t=arg.split('=')
if len(t)>1: k,v=arg.split('='); GET[k]=v
and for POST:
POST={}
args=sys.stdin.read().split('&')
for arg in args:
t=arg.split('=')
if len(t)>1: k, v=arg.split('='); POST[k]=v
You can now access the fields as following:
print GET.get('user_id')
print POST.get('user_name')
I must also point out that the CGI module doesn't work well. Consider this HTTP request:
POST / test.py?user_id=6
user_name=Bob&age=30
Using CGI.FieldStorage().getvalue('user_id')
will cause a null pointer exception because the module blindly checks the POST data, ignoring the fact that a POST request can carry GET parameters too.
Solution 3:
I've found nosklo's answer very extensive and useful! For those, like myself, who might find accessing the raw request data directly also useful, I would like to add the way to do that:
import os, sys
# the query string, which contains the raw GET data
# (For example, for http://example.com/myscript.py?a=b&c=d&e
# this is "a=b&c=d&e")
os.getenv("QUERY_STRING")
# the raw POST data
sys.stdin.read()