Starlette has a simple but capable request routing system. A routing table is defined as a list of routes, and passed when instantiating the application. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.routing import Route async def homepage(request): return PlainTextResponse("Homepage") async def about(request): return PlainTextResponse("About") routes = [ Route("/", endpoint=homepage), Route("/about", endpoint=about), ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` The `endpoint` argument can be one of: * A regular function or async function, which accepts a single `request` argument and which should return a response. * A class that implements the ASGI interface, such as Starlette's [class based views](endpoints.md). ## Path Parameters Paths can use URI templating style to capture path components. ```python Route('/users/{username}', user) ``` Convertors for `int`, `float`, and `path` are also available: ```python Route('/users/{user_id:int}', user) ``` Path parameters are made available in the request, as the `request.path_params` dictionary. ```python async def user(request): user_id = request.path_params['user_id'] ... ``` ## Handling HTTP methods Routes can also specify which HTTP methods are handled by an endpoint: ```python Route('/users/{user_id:int}', user, methods=["GET", "POST"]) ``` By default function endpoints will only accept `GET` requests, unless specified. ## Submounting routes In large applications you might find that you want to break out parts of the routing table, based on a common path prefix. ```python routes = [ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=[ Route('/', users, methods=['GET', 'POST']), Route('/{username}', user), ]) ] ``` This style allows you to define different subsets of the routing table in different parts of your project. ```python from myproject import users, auth routes = [ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=users.routes), Mount('/auth', routes=auth.routes), ] ``` You can also use mounting to include sub-applications within your Starlette application. For example... ```python # This is a standalone static files server: app = StaticFiles(directory="static") # This is a static files server mounted within a Starlette application, # underneath the "/static" path. routes = [ ... Mount("/static", StaticFiles(directory="static"), name="static") ] app = Starlette(routes=routes) ``` ## Reverse URL lookups You'll often want to be able to generate the URL for a particular route, such as in cases where you need to return a redirect response. ```python routes = [ Route("/", homepage, name="homepage") ] # We can use the following to return a URL... url = request.url_for("homepage") ``` URL lookups can include path parameters... ```python routes = [ Route("/users/{username}", user, name="user_detail") ] # We can use the following to return a URL... url = request.url_for("user_detail", username=...) ``` If a `Mount` includes a `name`, then submounts should use a `{prefix}:{name}` style for reverse URL lookups. ```python routes = [ Mount("/users", name="users", routes=[ Route("/", user, name="user_list"), Route("/{username}", user, name="user_detail") ]) ] # We can use the following to return URLs... url = request.url_for("users:user_list") url = request.url_for("users:user_detail", username=...) ``` Mounted applications may include a `path=...` parameter. ```python routes = [ ... Mount("/static", StaticFiles(directory="static"), name="static") ] # We can use the following to return URLs... url = request.url_for("static", path="/css/base.css") ``` For cases where there is no `request` instance, you can make reverse lookups against the application, although these will only return the URL path. ```python url = app.url_path_for("user_detail", username=...) ``` ## Route priority Incoming paths are matched against each `Route` in order. In cases where more that one route could match an incoming path, you should take care to ensure that more specific routes are listed before general cases. For example: ```python # Don't do this: `/users/me` will never match incoming requests. routes = [ Route('/users/{username}', user), Route('/users/me', current_user), ] # Do this: `/users/me` is tested first. routes = [ Route('/users/me', current_user), Route('/users/{username}', user), ] ``` ## Working with Router instances If you're working at a low-level you might want to use a plain `Router` instance, rather that creating a `Starlette` application. This gives you a lightweight ASGI application that just provides the application routing, without wrapping it up in any middleware. ```python app = Router(routes=[ Route('/', homepage), Mount('/users', routes=[ Route('/', users, methods=['GET', 'POST']), Route('/{username}', user), ]) ]) ```