Has I said before, that way other functions of the controller user
don't work
:(


On Oct 1, 3:10 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> yes
>
> routes_in = (
>   ("/user/(.+)", r"/welcome/user/view/\1"),
> )
>
> routes_out = (
>   ("/welcome/user/view/(.+)", r"/user/\1"),
> )
>
> On Oct 1, 8:57 am, Francisco Costa <m...@franciscocosta.com> wrote:
>
> > is it possible?
>
> > On Oct 1, 10:55 am, Francisco Costa <m...@franciscocosta.com> wrote:
>
> > > Thank you for your answers, both work for me, i didn't know that the
> > > order was important.
> > > But the thing is that I have others functions in the user controller
> > > that stopped to work, unless I have a dedicated route for them.
> > > ex: /welcome/user/index is a list of all users and only works if I
> > > had
>
> > > routes_in:  ("/user/index", r"/welcome/user/index"),
> > > routes_out:   ("/welcome/user/index", r"/user/index"),
>
> > > My question is, if there is any way that you don't have to route every
> > > function, and only the view/user
>
> > > On Sep 30, 3:19 pm, Wikus van de Merwe <dupakrop...@googlemail.com>
> > > wrote:
>
> > > > You mean this doesn't work for you?
>
> > > > routes_in = (
> > > >   ("/user/(.+)", r"/welcome/user/view/\1"),
> > > >   ("/(.+)", r"/welcome/\1")
> > > > )
>
> > > > routes_out = (
> > > >   ("/welcome/user/view/(.+)", r"/user/\1"),
> > > >   ("/welcome/(.+)", r"/\1")
> > > > )
>
>

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