Well, first, you need your dev server to actually serve main.js
, otherwise it won't be available for the browser.
It's customary to put all .js
and .css
files under the static
directory in small web apps, so your layout should look like this:
app.py
- static/
main.js
- views/
index.tpl
By no means this exact naming and layout is required, only often used.
Next, you should supply a handler for the static files:
from bottle import static_file
# ...
@route('/static/:path#.+#', name='static')
def static(path):
return static_file(path, root='static')
This will actuall serve your files under static/
to the browser.
Now, to the last thing. You specified your JavaScript as:
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/main.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
That means the path to .js
is relative to the current page. On you development server, the index page (/
) will look for .js
in /js/main.js
, and another page (say, /post/12
) will look for it in /post/12/js/main.js
, and will sure fail.
Instead, you need to use the get_url
function to properly reference static files. Your handler should look like this:
from Bottle import get_url
# ...
@route('/')
@view('index')
def index():
return { 'get_url': get_url }
And in index.tpl
, .js
should be referenced as:
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ get_url('static', path='main.js') }}" charset="utf-8"></script>
get_url
finds a handler with name='static'
, and calculates the proper path to it. For dev server, this will always be /static/
. You can probably even hard-code it in the template, but I don't recommend it for two reasons:
- You won't be able to mount your app anywhere but under root in production; i.e., when you upload it onto the porduction server, it can be placed under http://example.com/ (root), but not under http://example.com/myapp/.
- If you change the
/static/
dir location, you'll have to search it all over your templates and modify it in every single template.