Flask Material Kit
Open-source Flask Starter coded on top Material Kit Design (free version).
Last updated
Open-source Flask Starter coded on top Material Kit Design (free version).
Last updated
Flask Web App generated by the AppSeed platform on top of Material Kit design (free version) crafted by Creative-Tim
.
Version: v1.0.6 - release date
2022-06-08
Built with App Generator
UI Kit: Material Kit (free version)
SQLite database, Flask-SQLAlchemy ORM
Session-Based auth flow (login, register)
Deployment scripts: Docker, Gunicorn / Nginx, Heroku
Links
👉 Flask Material Kit - product page
👉 Flask Material Kit - LIVE App
👉 Support (Email and LIVE on Discord) for registered users
.
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Designed for those who like bold elements and beautiful websites, Material Kit 2 is ready to help you create stunning websites and web apps.
Material Kit 2 is built with over 60 frontend individual elements, like buttons, inputs, navbars, nav tabs, cards, or alerts, giving you the freedom of choosing and combining. All components can take variations in color, which you can easily modify using SASS files and classes.
UI Kit Documentation - full presentation over the UI foundation and components
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To use the starter, Python3 should be installed properly in the workstation. If you are not sure if Python is installed, please open a terminal and type python --version
. Here is the full list with dependencies and tools required to build the app:
Python3 - the programming language used to code the app
GIT - used to clone the source code from the Github repository
Basic development tools (g++ compiler, python development libraries ..etc) used by Python to compile the app dependencies in your environment.
(Optional) Docker
- a popular virtualization software
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👉 Step 1 - Download the code from the GH repository (using
GIT
)
👉 Step 2 - Start the APP in
Docker
Visit http://localhost:5085
in your browser. The app should be up & running.
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Download the code
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Unix
, MacOS
Install modules via
VENV
Set Up Flask Environment
Start the app
At this point, the app runs at http://127.0.0.1:5000/
.
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Windows
Install modules via
VENV
(windows)
Set Up Flask Environment
Start the app
At this point, the app runs at http://127.0.0.1:5000/
.
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Users
By default, the starter is not provided with users.
By default, the app redirects guest users to authenticate. In order to access the private pages, follow this set up:
Start the app via flask run
Access the registration
page and create a new user:
http://127.0.0.1:5000/register
Access the sign in
page and authenticate
http://127.0.0.1:5000/login
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The project is coded using a simple and intuitive structure presented below:
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The entry point of the project is the run.py
file where the project configuration is bundled. The most important files
that make the project functional are listed below:
run.py
is the application entry point
read the Debug
flag from .env
import the db
object from apps
package
import the create_app
helper from apps
Flask
application is built by create_app
If Debug=True
- SQLite is used (development mode)
If Debug=False
- SQLite is used (production mode)
Configuration
is defined in apps/config.py
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Flask App
object is constructedThe file that constructs the core features of our application is apps/__init__.py
. The most important steps are listed below:
Invokes SQLAlchemy to build the db
object.
Using SQLAlchemy
we can manage the database information with ease
Invokes LoginManager to build the login_manager
object.
login_manager
manage the authentication layer (login, logout, register)
Defines create_app
helper that does the following:
create the Flask
app object
injects db
and login_manager
objects
loads the configuration
register default blueprints
:
authentication
- handles the authentication routes
home
- serve all the pages saved in the apps/templates/home
folder
initialize the database
db.create_all()
- create all tables
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The codebase is built using a modular design that uses blueprints
. By default, the project comes with a two blueprints
Definition:
apps/authentication
. The core files:
__init__.py
- defines the Blueprint object
models.py
- defines the Users
model
forms.py
- defines the Login
and Registration
forms
utils.py
- helpers used to hass and verify the password
routes
- manages the authentication routes:
login
register
logout
This module returns all pages saved in the templates/home
directory to authenticated users. In case a page is not found, a generic page is returned using a 404
HTTP error status.
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The project comes with a modern UI fully migrated and usable with Flask Template Engine.
All pages and components are saved inside the apps/templates
directory. Here are the standard directories:
templates/layouts
: UI masterpages
templates/includes
: UI components (used across multiple pages)
templates/accounts
: login & registration page
templates/home
: all other pages served via a generic routing by apps/home
app
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The static assets used by the project (JS
, CSS
, images
) are saved inside the apps/static/assets
folder. This path can be customized with ease via ASSETS_ROOT
variable saved in the .env
file.
How it works
.env
defines the ASSETS_ROOT
variable
apps/config.py
read the value of ASSETS_ROOT
and defaults to /static/assets
if not found:
All pages and components use the config.ASSETS_ROOT
variable. Here is a sample extracted from templates/layouts/base.html
:
At runtime, the href
property is resolved to /static/assets/css/style.css
based on the value saved in the .env
file:
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Note: Make sure your Mysql server is properly installed and accessible.
Step 1 - Create the MySql Database to be used by the app
Create a new MySql
database
Create a new user
and assign full privilegies (read/write)
Step 2 - Install
flask_mysqldb
package
Step 3 - Edit the
.env
to match your MySql DB credentials. Make sureDEBUG
is set toFalse
.
DB_ENGINE
: mysql
DB_NAME
: default value = appseed_db
DB_HOST
: default value = localhost
DB_PORT
: default value = 3306
DB_USERNAME
: default value = appseed_db_usr
DB_PASS
: default value = pass
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Here is a sample:
At this point, the app should use MySql
for the persistence layer.
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production
As explained in the Static Assets section, the assets are managed via:
apps/static/assets
- the folder where JS
, CSS
, and images
files are saved
ASSETS_ROOT
- environment variable, that defaults to /static/assets
if not defined
In production, the contents of the apps/static/assets
files should be copied to an external (public) directory and the ASSETS_ROOT
environment variable updated accordingly.
For instance, if the static
files are copied to https://cdn.your-server.com/datta-able-assets
, the .env
file should be updated as below:
👉 Access the support page in case something is missing
👉 Use the App Generator to generate a new project
👉 Check-out the PREMIUM version, Flask Material Kit 2 PRO (live demo
) for more features and improved UI
✅ Bootstrap 5
version
✅ More pages & components
✅ Priority on support
✅ Flask Material Kit 2 PRO - product page