Starlette includes a few response classes that handle sending back the appropriate ASGI messages on the `send` channel. ### Response Signature: `Response(content, status_code=200, headers=None, media_type=None)` * `content` - A string or bytestring. * `status_code` - An integer HTTP status code. * `headers` - A dictionary of strings. * `media_type` - A string giving the media type. eg. "text/html" Starlette will automatically include a Content-Length header. It will also include a Content-Type header, based on the media_type and appending a charset for text types. Once you've instantiated a response, you can send it by calling it as an ASGI application instance. ```python from starlette.responses import Response async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = Response('Hello, world!', media_type='text/plain') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` #### Set Cookie Starlette provides a `set_cookie` method to allow you to set cookies on the response object. Signature: `Response.set_cookie(key, value, max_age=None, expires=None, path="/", domain=None, secure=False, httponly=False)` * `key` - A string that will be the cookie's key. * `value` - A string that will be the cookie's value. * `max_age` - An integer that defines the lifetime of the cookie in seconds. A negative integer or a value of `0` will discard the cookie immediately. `Optional` * `expires` - An integer that defines the number of seconds until the cookie expires. `Optional` * `path` - A string that specifies the subset of routes to which the cookie will apply. `Optional` * `domain` - A string that specifies the domain for which the cookie is valid. `Optional` * `secure` - A bool indicating that the cookie will only be sent to the server if request is made using SSL and the HTTPS protocol. `Optional` * `httponly` - A bool indicating that the cookie cannot be accessed via Javascript through `Document.cookie` property, the `XMLHttpRequest` or `Request` APIs. `Optional` #### Delete Cookie Conversly, Starlette also provides a `delete_cookie` method to manually expire a set cookie. Signature: `Response.delete_cookie(key, path='/', domain=None)` ### HTMLResponse Takes some text or bytes and returns an HTML response. ```python from starlette.responses import HTMLResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = HTMLResponse('

Hello, world!

') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### PlainTextResponse Takes some text or bytes and returns an plain text response. ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### JSONResponse Takes some data and returns an `application/json` encoded response. ```python from starlette.responses import JSONResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = JSONResponse({'hello': 'world'}) await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### UJSONResponse A JSON response class that uses the optimised `ujson` library for serialisation. Using `ujson` will result in faster JSON serialisation, but is also less careful than Python's built-in implementation in how it handles some edge-cases. In general you *probably* want to stick with `JSONResponse` by default unless you are micro-optimising a particular endpoint. ```python from starlette.responses import UJSONResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = UJSONResponse({'hello': 'world'}) await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### RedirectResponse Returns an HTTP redirect. Uses a 302 status code by default. ```python from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse, RedirectResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' if scope['path'] != '/': response = RedirectResponse(url='/') else: response = PlainTextResponse('Hello, world!') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` ### StreamingResponse Takes an async generator or a normal generator/iterator and streams the response body. ```python from starlette.responses import StreamingResponse import asyncio async def slow_numbers(minimum, maximum): yield('') async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' generator = slow_numbers(1, 10) response = StreamingResponse(generator, media_type='text/html') await response(scope, receive, send) ``` Have in mind that file-like objects (like those created by `open()`) are normal iterators. So, you can return them directly in a `StreamingResponse`. ### FileResponse Asynchronously streams a file as the response. Takes a different set of arguments to instantiate than the other response types: * `path` - The filepath to the file to stream. * `headers` - Any custom headers to include, as a dictionary. * `media_type` - A string giving the media type. If unset, the filename or path will be used to infer a media type. * `filename` - If set, this will be included in the response `Content-Disposition`. File responses will include appropriate `Content-Length`, `Last-Modified` and `ETag` headers. ```python from starlette.responses import FileResponse async def app(scope, receive, send): assert scope['type'] == 'http' response = FileResponse('statics/favicon.ico') await response(scope, receive, send) ```