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Showing content from https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-April/064565.html below:

[Python-Dev] [Web-SIG] Adding wsgiref to stdlib

[Python-Dev] [Web-SIG] Adding wsgiref to stdlib [Python-Dev] [Web-SIG] Adding wsgiref to stdlibCollin Winter collinw at gmail.com
Fri Apr 28 22:47:38 CEST 2006
On 4/28/06, Phillip J. Eby <pje at telecommunity.com> wrote:
> At 01:19 PM 4/28/2006 -0700, Guido van Rossum wrote:
> >It still looks like an application of WSGI, not part of a reference
> >implementation. Multiple apps looks like an advanced topic to me; more
> >something that the infrastructure (Apache server or whatever) ought to
> >take care of.
>
> I'm fine with a super-simple implementation that emphasizes the concept,
> not feature-richness.  A simple dict-based implementation showcases both
> the wsgiref function for path shifting, and the idea of composing an
> application out of mini-applications.  (The point is to demonstrate how
> people can compose WSGI applications *without* needing a framework.)
>
> But I don't think that this demo should be a prefix mapper; people doing
> more sophisticated routing can use Paste or Routes.
>
> If it's small enough, I'd say to add this mapper to wsgiref.util, or if
> Guido is strongly set against it being in the code, we should at least put
> it in the documentation as an example of how to use 'shift_path_info()' in
> wsgiref.util.

Perhaps this could go in Demo/wsgiref/?

Collin Winter
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