Every Textual application is now a web application.
With 3 lines of code, any Textual app can run in the browser.
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This is Posting running in the terminal. |
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This is Posting running in the browser. |
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First, install (or upgrade) Textual.
Then install textual-serve from PyPI:
pip install textual-serve
First import the Server class:
from textual_serve.server import ServerThen create a Server instance and pass the command that launches your Textual app:
server = Server("python -m textual")The command can be anything you would enter in the shell, as long as it results in a Textual app running.
Finally, call the serve method:
server.serve()You will now be able to click on the link in the terminal to run your app in a browser.
Run this code, visit http://localhost:8000
from textual_serve.server import Server
server = Server("python -m textual")
server.serve()The Server class has the following parameters:
| parameter | description |
|---|---|
| command | A shell command to launch a Textual app. |
| host | The host of the web application (defaults to "localhost"). |
| port | The port for the web application (defaults to 8000). |
| title | The title show in the web app on load, leave as None to use the command. |
| public_url | The public URL, if the server is behind a proxy. None for the local URL. |
| statics_path | Path to statics folder, relative to server.py. Default uses directory in module. |
| templates_path | Path to templates folder, relative to server.py. Default uses directory in module. |
The Server.serve method accepts a debug parameter.
When set to True, this will enable textual devtools.
When you visit the app URL, the server launches an instance of your app in a subprocess, and communicates with it via a websocket.
This means that you can serve multiple Textual apps across all the CPUs on your system.
Note that Textual-serve uses a custom protocol to communicate with Textual apps. It does not simply expose a shell in your browser. There is no way for a malicious user to do anything the app-author didn't intend.
See also textual-web which serves Textual apps on a public URL.
You can consider this project to essentially be a self-hosted equivalent of Textual-web.

