Inserting-embedding some html data at the end of a .py file
Roland Koebler
r.koebler at yahoo.de
Wed Mar 6 04:00:14 EST 2013
Hi,
On Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 09:39:19AM -0800, Νίκος Γκρ33κ wrote:
> But i did, I just tried this:
>
> # open html template
> if htmlpage.endswith('.html'):
> f = open( "/home/nikos/public_html/" + htmlpage )
>
> htmldata = f.read()
> counter = ''' <center><a href="mailto:support at superhost.gr"> <img src="/data/images/mail.png"> </a>
> <center><table border=2 cellpadding=2 bgcolor=black>
> <td><font color=lime>Αριθμός Επισκεπτών</td>
> <td><a href="http://superhost.gr/?show=stats"><font color=cyan> %d </td>
> ''' % data[0]
> else:
> f = open( "/home/nikos/public_html/cgi-bin/" + htmlpage )
>
> htmldata = f.read()
> counter = '''
> print '''<center><a href="mailto:support at superhost.gr"> <img src="/data/images/mail.png"> </a>
> <center><table border=2 cellpadding=2 bgcolor=black>
> <td><font color=lime>Αριθμός Επισκεπτών</td>
> <td><a href="http://superhost.gr/?show=stats"><font color=cyan> %d </td>
> '''
> ''' % data[0]
>
> template = htmldata + counter
> print ( template )
> =============
>
> But still doens't embed correctly the additional html data at the end of the .py files.....
>
> Do you have an idea?
as someone said: You're doing it the wrong way.
I would recommend to use a template-engine; then you can put the
complete html-design (and some design-control-structures) into
the template (and *not* into the cgi) and fill data into the
template with a python-script.
Roland
More information about the Python-list
mailing list