This was a tricky one. The $f does not match the extension.
routes_in = (
( '/$c/$f' , '/init/$c/$f' ),
( '/$c/$f\.$e' , '/init/$c/$f\.$e' ),
( '/$c/$f/$anything' , '/init/$c/$f/$anything' )
)
routes_out = (
( ''/init/$c/$f' , '/$c/$f' ),
( ''/init/$c/$f\.$e' , '/$c/$f.$e' ),
( ''/init/$c/$f/$anything' , '/$c/$f/$anything' )
)
notice you cannot reverse the routes with .
On Friday, 9 November 2012 12:37:38 UTC-6, Ashu Verma wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> i am having the basic routing where i omitted the application name in url.
> Below is the content of my routes.py
>
> default_application = 'init'
> default_controller = 'default'
> default_function = 'index'
>
> routes_in = (
> ( '/$c/$f' , '/init/$c/$f' ),
> ( '/$c/$f/$anything' , '/init/$c/$f/$anything' )
> )
>
> routes_out = [(x, y) for (y, x) in routes_in]
>
>
>
> But when i generate a url via URL helper
>
> {{=URL(f='temp.json', hmac_key="****", user_signature=True)}}
>
>
> This will generate a URL with application name which means that
> application name will be treated as controller and I will get a HTTP 404.
>
> So either i create my URL manually, but then i wouldn't be able to use
> digitally signed url or I should modify the routes.py which I am not able
> to figure out without dropping the URL routing.
>
> Also, I tried putting a=None and a='' in URL helper, still application
> name is appending.
>
>
> Thank you,
> Ashu
>
>
>
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