loongson/pypi/: markupsafe-2.1.5 metadata and description

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Safely add untrusted strings to HTML/XML markup.

classifiers
  • Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
  • Environment :: Web Environment
  • Intended Audience :: Developers
  • License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
  • Operating System :: OS Independent
  • Programming Language :: Python
  • Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
  • Topic :: Text Processing :: Markup :: HTML
description_content_type text/x-rst
license BSD-3-Clause
maintainer Pallets
maintainer_email contact@palletsprojects.com
project_urls
  • Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
  • Documentation, https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/
  • Changes, https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/changes/
  • Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/
  • Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/issues/
  • Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
requires_python >=3.7

Because this project isn't in the mirror_whitelist, no releases from root/pypi are included.

File Tox results History
MarkupSafe-2.1.5-cp38-cp38-linux_loongarch64.whl
Size
29 KB
Type
Python Wheel
Python
3.8
MarkupSafe-2.1.5-cp39-cp39-linux_loongarch64.whl
Size
880 KB
Type
Python Wheel
Python
3.9

MarkupSafe implements a text object that escapes characters so it is safe to use in HTML and XML. Characters that have special meanings are replaced so that they display as the actual characters. This mitigates injection attacks, meaning untrusted user input can safely be displayed on a page.

Installing

Install and update using pip:

pip install -U MarkupSafe

Examples

>>> from markupsafe import Markup, escape

>>> # escape replaces special characters and wraps in Markup
>>> escape("<script>alert(document.cookie);</script>")
Markup('&lt;script&gt;alert(document.cookie);&lt;/script&gt;')

>>> # wrap in Markup to mark text "safe" and prevent escaping
>>> Markup("<strong>Hello</strong>")
Markup('<strong>hello</strong>')

>>> escape(Markup("<strong>Hello</strong>"))
Markup('<strong>hello</strong>')

>>> # Markup is a str subclass
>>> # methods and operators escape their arguments
>>> template = Markup("Hello <em>{name}</em>")
>>> template.format(name='"World"')
Markup('Hello <em>&#34;World&#34;</em>')