list_student_ids = get(STUDENTS.keys) # [0]
second example, Python: @delete
@path(r'{uid: [0-9]+}')
def delete_student(uid):
if STUDENTS.pop(uid, None): # [0]
return True
raise WebApplicationException(Response.Status.NOT_FOUND)
the last line generally wouldn't be this complex, in Flask you'd just call `flask.abort(404)` (which can be used inline with an `or`, as with waffle_ss's ruby example, but that's not usual/good Python style), in Django it'd be `raise Http404()`.Although in Django you'd really use the `get_object_or_404` shortcut for ORM objects:
def delete_student(uid):
get_object_or_404(StudentModel, pk=uid).delete()
return True
And you wouldn't bother with the return since a 200 result would mean the deletion was correctly executed.[0] Used Python's MutableMapping API here, it works slightly differently than Java's equivalent Map interface: `.keys()` returns a sequence of the mapping's keys and `.pop()` asks for a default value to return in case nothing was found there, otherwise it raises `KeyError` if the key was not found)