A.) To configure SSL certificates B.) To define routes C.) To execute a function after each request, even if an exception occurred during processing D.) To serve static files
A.) flask-auth B.) flask-login C.) flask-oauth D.) auth-handler
A.) Using the request.params object B.) Using the request.query object C.) Using the request.args object D.) Using the request.parameters object
A.) To define a custom error page for 404 errors B.) To configure SSL certificates C.) To define a custom error page for all errors D.) To serve static files
A.) flask-cors B.) cors-handler C.) cross-origin-middleware D.) flask-cross-origin
A.) To manage the Flask application's state B.) To serve static files C.) To configure server settings D.) To store data for the duration of a request
A.) flask-migrate B.) flask-db-utils C.) flask-sqlalchemy D.) db-migrate
A.) To configure SSL certificates B.) To define routes C.) To create custom CLI commands for Flask applications D.) To serve static files
A.) flask-test B.) unittest C.) pytest D.) Flask does not support testing
A.) Handling file uploads B.) Adding WebSocket support to Flask applications C.) Managing authentication D.) Serving static files