These are useful if you want more control, or if you want to employ
some of the algorithms implemented in this module in other
circumstances.
parse( |
fp[, keep_blank_values[,
strict_parsing]]) |
-
Parse a query in the environment or from a file (the file defaults
to
sys.stdin ). The keep_blank_values and
strict_parsing parameters are passed to parse_qs()
unchanged.
parse_qs( |
qs[, keep_blank_values[,
strict_parsing]]) |
-
Parse a query string given as a string argument (data of type
application/x-www-form-urlencoded). Data are
returned as a dictionary. The dictionary keys are the unique query
variable names and the values are lists of values for each name.
The optional argument keep_blank_values is
a flag indicating whether blank values in
URL encoded queries should be treated as blank strings.
A true value indicates that blanks should be retained as
blank strings. The default false value indicates that
blank values are to be ignored and treated as if they were
not included.
The optional argument strict_parsing is a flag indicating what
to do with parsing errors. If false (the default), errors
are silently ignored. If true, errors raise a ValueError
exception.
Use the urllib.urlencode() function to convert
such dictionaries into query strings.
parse_qsl( |
qs[, keep_blank_values[,
strict_parsing]]) |
-
Parse a query string given as a string argument (data of type
application/x-www-form-urlencoded). Data are
returned as a list of name, value pairs.
The optional argument keep_blank_values is
a flag indicating whether blank values in
URL encoded queries should be treated as blank strings.
A true value indicates that blanks should be retained as
blank strings. The default false value indicates that
blank values are to be ignored and treated as if they were
not included.
The optional argument strict_parsing is a flag indicating what
to do with parsing errors. If false (the default), errors
are silently ignored. If true, errors raise a ValueError
exception.
Use the urllib.urlencode() function to convert
such lists of pairs into query strings.
parse_multipart( |
fp, pdict) |
-
Parse input of type multipart/form-data (for
file uploads). Arguments are fp for the input file and
pdict for a dictionary containing other parameters in
the header.
Returns a dictionary just like parse_qs() keys are the
field names, each value is a list of values for that field. This is
easy to use but not much good if you are expecting megabytes to be
uploaded -- in that case, use the FieldStorage class instead
which is much more flexible.
Note that this does not parse nested multipart parts -- use
FieldStorage for that.
-
Parse a MIME header (such as ) into a main
value and a dictionary of parameters.
-
Robust test CGI script, usable as main program.
Writes minimal HTTP headers and formats all information provided to
the script in HTML form.
-
Format the shell environment in HTML.
-
Format a form in HTML.
-
Format the current directory in HTML.
-
Print a list of useful (used by CGI) environment variables in
HTML.
-
Convert the characters
"&", "<" and ">" in string s to
HTML-safe sequences. Use this if you need to display text that might
contain such characters in HTML. If the optional flag quote is
true, the quotation mark character (""") is also translated;
this helps for inclusion in an HTML attribute value, as in
<A
HREF="..."> . If the value to be quoted might include single- or
double-quote characters, or both, consider using the
quoteattr() function in the xml.sax.saxutils
module instead.
Release 2.5.2, documentation updated on 21st February, 2008.
See About this document... for information on suggesting changes.
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