Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | :mod:`optparse` --- More powerful command line option parser |
| 2 | ============================================================ |
| 3 | |
| 4 | .. module:: optparse |
| 5 | :synopsis: More convenient, flexible, and powerful command-line parsing library. |
| 6 | .. moduleauthor:: Greg Ward <gward@python.net> |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 7 | .. sectionauthor:: Greg Ward <gward@python.net> |
| 8 | |
| 9 | |
| 10 | ``optparse`` is a more convenient, flexible, and powerful library for parsing |
| 11 | command-line options than ``getopt``. ``optparse`` uses a more declarative |
| 12 | style of command-line parsing: you create an instance of :class:`OptionParser`, |
| 13 | populate it with options, and parse the command line. ``optparse`` allows users |
| 14 | to specify options in the conventional GNU/POSIX syntax, and additionally |
| 15 | generates usage and help messages for you. |
| 16 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 17 | Here's an example of using ``optparse`` in a simple script:: |
| 18 | |
| 19 | from optparse import OptionParser |
| 20 | [...] |
| 21 | parser = OptionParser() |
| 22 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", dest="filename", |
| 23 | help="write report to FILE", metavar="FILE") |
| 24 | parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", |
| 25 | action="store_false", dest="verbose", default=True, |
| 26 | help="don't print status messages to stdout") |
| 27 | |
| 28 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args() |
| 29 | |
| 30 | With these few lines of code, users of your script can now do the "usual thing" |
| 31 | on the command-line, for example:: |
| 32 | |
| 33 | <yourscript> --file=outfile -q |
| 34 | |
| 35 | As it parses the command line, ``optparse`` sets attributes of the ``options`` |
| 36 | object returned by :meth:`parse_args` based on user-supplied command-line |
| 37 | values. When :meth:`parse_args` returns from parsing this command line, |
| 38 | ``options.filename`` will be ``"outfile"`` and ``options.verbose`` will be |
| 39 | ``False``. ``optparse`` supports both long and short options, allows short |
| 40 | options to be merged together, and allows options to be associated with their |
| 41 | arguments in a variety of ways. Thus, the following command lines are all |
| 42 | equivalent to the above example:: |
| 43 | |
| 44 | <yourscript> -f outfile --quiet |
| 45 | <yourscript> --quiet --file outfile |
| 46 | <yourscript> -q -foutfile |
| 47 | <yourscript> -qfoutfile |
| 48 | |
| 49 | Additionally, users can run one of :: |
| 50 | |
| 51 | <yourscript> -h |
| 52 | <yourscript> --help |
| 53 | |
| 54 | and ``optparse`` will print out a brief summary of your script's options:: |
| 55 | |
| 56 | usage: <yourscript> [options] |
| 57 | |
| 58 | options: |
| 59 | -h, --help show this help message and exit |
| 60 | -f FILE, --file=FILE write report to FILE |
| 61 | -q, --quiet don't print status messages to stdout |
| 62 | |
| 63 | where the value of *yourscript* is determined at runtime (normally from |
| 64 | ``sys.argv[0]``). |
| 65 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 66 | |
| 67 | .. _optparse-background: |
| 68 | |
| 69 | Background |
| 70 | ---------- |
| 71 | |
| 72 | :mod:`optparse` was explicitly designed to encourage the creation of programs |
| 73 | with straightforward, conventional command-line interfaces. To that end, it |
| 74 | supports only the most common command-line syntax and semantics conventionally |
| 75 | used under Unix. If you are unfamiliar with these conventions, read this |
| 76 | section to acquaint yourself with them. |
| 77 | |
| 78 | |
| 79 | .. _optparse-terminology: |
| 80 | |
| 81 | Terminology |
| 82 | ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 83 | |
| 84 | argument |
| 85 | a string entered on the command-line, and passed by the shell to ``execl()`` or |
| 86 | ``execv()``. In Python, arguments are elements of ``sys.argv[1:]`` |
| 87 | (``sys.argv[0]`` is the name of the program being executed). Unix shells also |
| 88 | use the term "word". |
| 89 | |
| 90 | It is occasionally desirable to substitute an argument list other than |
| 91 | ``sys.argv[1:]``, so you should read "argument" as "an element of |
| 92 | ``sys.argv[1:]``, or of some other list provided as a substitute for |
| 93 | ``sys.argv[1:]``". |
| 94 | |
| 95 | option |
| 96 | an argument used to supply extra information to guide or customize the execution |
| 97 | of a program. There are many different syntaxes for options; the traditional |
| 98 | Unix syntax is a hyphen ("-") followed by a single letter, e.g. ``"-x"`` or |
| 99 | ``"-F"``. Also, traditional Unix syntax allows multiple options to be merged |
| 100 | into a single argument, e.g. ``"-x -F"`` is equivalent to ``"-xF"``. The GNU |
| 101 | project introduced ``"--"`` followed by a series of hyphen-separated words, e.g. |
| 102 | ``"--file"`` or ``"--dry-run"``. These are the only two option syntaxes |
| 103 | provided by :mod:`optparse`. |
| 104 | |
| 105 | Some other option syntaxes that the world has seen include: |
| 106 | |
| 107 | * a hyphen followed by a few letters, e.g. ``"-pf"`` (this is *not* the same |
| 108 | as multiple options merged into a single argument) |
| 109 | |
| 110 | * a hyphen followed by a whole word, e.g. ``"-file"`` (this is technically |
| 111 | equivalent to the previous syntax, but they aren't usually seen in the same |
| 112 | program) |
| 113 | |
| 114 | * a plus sign followed by a single letter, or a few letters, or a word, e.g. |
| 115 | ``"+f"``, ``"+rgb"`` |
| 116 | |
| 117 | * a slash followed by a letter, or a few letters, or a word, e.g. ``"/f"``, |
| 118 | ``"/file"`` |
| 119 | |
| 120 | These option syntaxes are not supported by :mod:`optparse`, and they never will |
| 121 | be. This is deliberate: the first three are non-standard on any environment, |
| 122 | and the last only makes sense if you're exclusively targeting VMS, MS-DOS, |
| 123 | and/or Windows. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | option argument |
| 126 | an argument that follows an option, is closely associated with that option, and |
| 127 | is consumed from the argument list when that option is. With :mod:`optparse`, |
| 128 | option arguments may either be in a separate argument from their option:: |
| 129 | |
| 130 | -f foo |
| 131 | --file foo |
| 132 | |
| 133 | or included in the same argument:: |
| 134 | |
| 135 | -ffoo |
| 136 | --file=foo |
| 137 | |
| 138 | Typically, a given option either takes an argument or it doesn't. Lots of people |
| 139 | want an "optional option arguments" feature, meaning that some options will take |
| 140 | an argument if they see it, and won't if they don't. This is somewhat |
| 141 | controversial, because it makes parsing ambiguous: if ``"-a"`` takes an optional |
| 142 | argument and ``"-b"`` is another option entirely, how do we interpret ``"-ab"``? |
| 143 | Because of this ambiguity, :mod:`optparse` does not support this feature. |
| 144 | |
| 145 | positional argument |
| 146 | something leftover in the argument list after options have been parsed, i.e. |
| 147 | after options and their arguments have been parsed and removed from the argument |
| 148 | list. |
| 149 | |
| 150 | required option |
| 151 | an option that must be supplied on the command-line; note that the phrase |
| 152 | "required option" is self-contradictory in English. :mod:`optparse` doesn't |
| 153 | prevent you from implementing required options, but doesn't give you much help |
| 154 | at it either. See ``examples/required_1.py`` and ``examples/required_2.py`` in |
| 155 | the :mod:`optparse` source distribution for two ways to implement required |
| 156 | options with :mod:`optparse`. |
| 157 | |
| 158 | For example, consider this hypothetical command-line:: |
| 159 | |
| 160 | prog -v --report /tmp/report.txt foo bar |
| 161 | |
| 162 | ``"-v"`` and ``"--report"`` are both options. Assuming that :option:`--report` |
| 163 | takes one argument, ``"/tmp/report.txt"`` is an option argument. ``"foo"`` and |
| 164 | ``"bar"`` are positional arguments. |
| 165 | |
| 166 | |
| 167 | .. _optparse-what-options-for: |
| 168 | |
| 169 | What are options for? |
| 170 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 171 | |
| 172 | Options are used to provide extra information to tune or customize the execution |
| 173 | of a program. In case it wasn't clear, options are usually *optional*. A |
| 174 | program should be able to run just fine with no options whatsoever. (Pick a |
| 175 | random program from the Unix or GNU toolsets. Can it run without any options at |
| 176 | all and still make sense? The main exceptions are ``find``, ``tar``, and |
| 177 | ``dd``\ ---all of which are mutant oddballs that have been rightly criticized |
| 178 | for their non-standard syntax and confusing interfaces.) |
| 179 | |
| 180 | Lots of people want their programs to have "required options". Think about it. |
| 181 | If it's required, then it's *not optional*! If there is a piece of information |
| 182 | that your program absolutely requires in order to run successfully, that's what |
| 183 | positional arguments are for. |
| 184 | |
| 185 | As an example of good command-line interface design, consider the humble ``cp`` |
| 186 | utility, for copying files. It doesn't make much sense to try to copy files |
| 187 | without supplying a destination and at least one source. Hence, ``cp`` fails if |
| 188 | you run it with no arguments. However, it has a flexible, useful syntax that |
| 189 | does not require any options at all:: |
| 190 | |
| 191 | cp SOURCE DEST |
| 192 | cp SOURCE ... DEST-DIR |
| 193 | |
| 194 | You can get pretty far with just that. Most ``cp`` implementations provide a |
| 195 | bunch of options to tweak exactly how the files are copied: you can preserve |
| 196 | mode and modification time, avoid following symlinks, ask before clobbering |
| 197 | existing files, etc. But none of this distracts from the core mission of |
| 198 | ``cp``, which is to copy either one file to another, or several files to another |
| 199 | directory. |
| 200 | |
| 201 | |
| 202 | .. _optparse-what-positional-arguments-for: |
| 203 | |
| 204 | What are positional arguments for? |
| 205 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 206 | |
| 207 | Positional arguments are for those pieces of information that your program |
| 208 | absolutely, positively requires to run. |
| 209 | |
| 210 | A good user interface should have as few absolute requirements as possible. If |
| 211 | your program requires 17 distinct pieces of information in order to run |
| 212 | successfully, it doesn't much matter *how* you get that information from the |
| 213 | user---most people will give up and walk away before they successfully run the |
| 214 | program. This applies whether the user interface is a command-line, a |
| 215 | configuration file, or a GUI: if you make that many demands on your users, most |
| 216 | of them will simply give up. |
| 217 | |
| 218 | In short, try to minimize the amount of information that users are absolutely |
| 219 | required to supply---use sensible defaults whenever possible. Of course, you |
| 220 | also want to make your programs reasonably flexible. That's what options are |
| 221 | for. Again, it doesn't matter if they are entries in a config file, widgets in |
| 222 | the "Preferences" dialog of a GUI, or command-line options---the more options |
| 223 | you implement, the more flexible your program is, and the more complicated its |
| 224 | implementation becomes. Too much flexibility has drawbacks as well, of course; |
| 225 | too many options can overwhelm users and make your code much harder to maintain. |
| 226 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 227 | |
| 228 | .. _optparse-tutorial: |
| 229 | |
| 230 | Tutorial |
| 231 | -------- |
| 232 | |
| 233 | While :mod:`optparse` is quite flexible and powerful, it's also straightforward |
| 234 | to use in most cases. This section covers the code patterns that are common to |
| 235 | any :mod:`optparse`\ -based program. |
| 236 | |
| 237 | First, you need to import the OptionParser class; then, early in the main |
| 238 | program, create an OptionParser instance:: |
| 239 | |
| 240 | from optparse import OptionParser |
| 241 | [...] |
| 242 | parser = OptionParser() |
| 243 | |
| 244 | Then you can start defining options. The basic syntax is:: |
| 245 | |
| 246 | parser.add_option(opt_str, ..., |
| 247 | attr=value, ...) |
| 248 | |
| 249 | Each option has one or more option strings, such as ``"-f"`` or ``"--file"``, |
| 250 | and several option attributes that tell :mod:`optparse` what to expect and what |
| 251 | to do when it encounters that option on the command line. |
| 252 | |
| 253 | Typically, each option will have one short option string and one long option |
| 254 | string, e.g.:: |
| 255 | |
| 256 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", ...) |
| 257 | |
| 258 | You're free to define as many short option strings and as many long option |
| 259 | strings as you like (including zero), as long as there is at least one option |
| 260 | string overall. |
| 261 | |
| 262 | The option strings passed to :meth:`add_option` are effectively labels for the |
| 263 | option defined by that call. For brevity, we will frequently refer to |
| 264 | *encountering an option* on the command line; in reality, :mod:`optparse` |
| 265 | encounters *option strings* and looks up options from them. |
| 266 | |
| 267 | Once all of your options are defined, instruct :mod:`optparse` to parse your |
| 268 | program's command line:: |
| 269 | |
| 270 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args() |
| 271 | |
| 272 | (If you like, you can pass a custom argument list to :meth:`parse_args`, but |
| 273 | that's rarely necessary: by default it uses ``sys.argv[1:]``.) |
| 274 | |
| 275 | :meth:`parse_args` returns two values: |
| 276 | |
| 277 | * ``options``, an object containing values for all of your options---e.g. if |
| 278 | ``"--file"`` takes a single string argument, then ``options.file`` will be the |
| 279 | filename supplied by the user, or ``None`` if the user did not supply that |
| 280 | option |
| 281 | |
| 282 | * ``args``, the list of positional arguments leftover after parsing options |
| 283 | |
| 284 | This tutorial section only covers the four most important option attributes: |
| 285 | :attr:`action`, :attr:`type`, :attr:`dest` (destination), and :attr:`help`. Of |
| 286 | these, :attr:`action` is the most fundamental. |
| 287 | |
| 288 | |
| 289 | .. _optparse-understanding-option-actions: |
| 290 | |
| 291 | Understanding option actions |
| 292 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 293 | |
| 294 | Actions tell :mod:`optparse` what to do when it encounters an option on the |
| 295 | command line. There is a fixed set of actions hard-coded into :mod:`optparse`; |
| 296 | adding new actions is an advanced topic covered in section |
| 297 | :ref:`optparse-extending-optparse`. Most actions tell |
| 298 | :mod:`optparse` to store a value in some variable---for example, take a string |
| 299 | from the command line and store it in an attribute of ``options``. |
| 300 | |
| 301 | If you don't specify an option action, :mod:`optparse` defaults to ``store``. |
| 302 | |
| 303 | |
| 304 | .. _optparse-store-action: |
| 305 | |
| 306 | The store action |
| 307 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 308 | |
| 309 | The most common option action is ``store``, which tells :mod:`optparse` to take |
| 310 | the next argument (or the remainder of the current argument), ensure that it is |
| 311 | of the correct type, and store it to your chosen destination. |
| 312 | |
| 313 | For example:: |
| 314 | |
| 315 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", |
| 316 | action="store", type="string", dest="filename") |
| 317 | |
| 318 | Now let's make up a fake command line and ask :mod:`optparse` to parse it:: |
| 319 | |
| 320 | args = ["-f", "foo.txt"] |
| 321 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args(args) |
| 322 | |
| 323 | When :mod:`optparse` sees the option string ``"-f"``, it consumes the next |
| 324 | argument, ``"foo.txt"``, and stores it in ``options.filename``. So, after this |
| 325 | call to :meth:`parse_args`, ``options.filename`` is ``"foo.txt"``. |
| 326 | |
| 327 | Some other option types supported by :mod:`optparse` are ``int`` and ``float``. |
| 328 | Here's an option that expects an integer argument:: |
| 329 | |
| 330 | parser.add_option("-n", type="int", dest="num") |
| 331 | |
| 332 | Note that this option has no long option string, which is perfectly acceptable. |
| 333 | Also, there's no explicit action, since the default is ``store``. |
| 334 | |
| 335 | Let's parse another fake command-line. This time, we'll jam the option argument |
| 336 | right up against the option: since ``"-n42"`` (one argument) is equivalent to |
| 337 | ``"-n 42"`` (two arguments), the code :: |
| 338 | |
| 339 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args(["-n42"]) |
Georg Brandl | 6911e3c | 2007-09-04 07:15:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 340 | print(options.num) |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 341 | |
| 342 | will print ``"42"``. |
| 343 | |
| 344 | If you don't specify a type, :mod:`optparse` assumes ``string``. Combined with |
| 345 | the fact that the default action is ``store``, that means our first example can |
| 346 | be a lot shorter:: |
| 347 | |
| 348 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", dest="filename") |
| 349 | |
| 350 | If you don't supply a destination, :mod:`optparse` figures out a sensible |
| 351 | default from the option strings: if the first long option string is |
| 352 | ``"--foo-bar"``, then the default destination is ``foo_bar``. If there are no |
| 353 | long option strings, :mod:`optparse` looks at the first short option string: the |
| 354 | default destination for ``"-f"`` is ``f``. |
| 355 | |
Georg Brandl | 5c10664 | 2007-11-29 17:41:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 356 | :mod:`optparse` also includes the built-in ``complex`` type. Adding |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 357 | types is covered in section :ref:`optparse-extending-optparse`. |
| 358 | |
| 359 | |
| 360 | .. _optparse-handling-boolean-options: |
| 361 | |
| 362 | Handling boolean (flag) options |
| 363 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 364 | |
| 365 | Flag options---set a variable to true or false when a particular option is seen |
| 366 | ---are quite common. :mod:`optparse` supports them with two separate actions, |
| 367 | ``store_true`` and ``store_false``. For example, you might have a ``verbose`` |
| 368 | flag that is turned on with ``"-v"`` and off with ``"-q"``:: |
| 369 | |
| 370 | parser.add_option("-v", action="store_true", dest="verbose") |
| 371 | parser.add_option("-q", action="store_false", dest="verbose") |
| 372 | |
| 373 | Here we have two different options with the same destination, which is perfectly |
| 374 | OK. (It just means you have to be a bit careful when setting default values--- |
| 375 | see below.) |
| 376 | |
| 377 | When :mod:`optparse` encounters ``"-v"`` on the command line, it sets |
| 378 | ``options.verbose`` to ``True``; when it encounters ``"-q"``, |
| 379 | ``options.verbose`` is set to ``False``. |
| 380 | |
| 381 | |
| 382 | .. _optparse-other-actions: |
| 383 | |
| 384 | Other actions |
| 385 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 386 | |
| 387 | Some other actions supported by :mod:`optparse` are: |
| 388 | |
| 389 | ``store_const`` |
| 390 | store a constant value |
| 391 | |
| 392 | ``append`` |
| 393 | append this option's argument to a list |
| 394 | |
| 395 | ``count`` |
| 396 | increment a counter by one |
| 397 | |
| 398 | ``callback`` |
| 399 | call a specified function |
| 400 | |
| 401 | These are covered in section :ref:`optparse-reference-guide`, Reference Guide |
| 402 | and section :ref:`optparse-option-callbacks`. |
| 403 | |
| 404 | |
| 405 | .. _optparse-default-values: |
| 406 | |
| 407 | Default values |
| 408 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 409 | |
| 410 | All of the above examples involve setting some variable (the "destination") when |
| 411 | certain command-line options are seen. What happens if those options are never |
| 412 | seen? Since we didn't supply any defaults, they are all set to ``None``. This |
| 413 | is usually fine, but sometimes you want more control. :mod:`optparse` lets you |
| 414 | supply a default value for each destination, which is assigned before the |
| 415 | command line is parsed. |
| 416 | |
| 417 | First, consider the verbose/quiet example. If we want :mod:`optparse` to set |
| 418 | ``verbose`` to ``True`` unless ``"-q"`` is seen, then we can do this:: |
| 419 | |
| 420 | parser.add_option("-v", action="store_true", dest="verbose", default=True) |
| 421 | parser.add_option("-q", action="store_false", dest="verbose") |
| 422 | |
| 423 | Since default values apply to the *destination* rather than to any particular |
| 424 | option, and these two options happen to have the same destination, this is |
| 425 | exactly equivalent:: |
| 426 | |
| 427 | parser.add_option("-v", action="store_true", dest="verbose") |
| 428 | parser.add_option("-q", action="store_false", dest="verbose", default=True) |
| 429 | |
| 430 | Consider this:: |
| 431 | |
| 432 | parser.add_option("-v", action="store_true", dest="verbose", default=False) |
| 433 | parser.add_option("-q", action="store_false", dest="verbose", default=True) |
| 434 | |
| 435 | Again, the default value for ``verbose`` will be ``True``: the last default |
| 436 | value supplied for any particular destination is the one that counts. |
| 437 | |
| 438 | A clearer way to specify default values is the :meth:`set_defaults` method of |
| 439 | OptionParser, which you can call at any time before calling :meth:`parse_args`:: |
| 440 | |
| 441 | parser.set_defaults(verbose=True) |
| 442 | parser.add_option(...) |
| 443 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args() |
| 444 | |
| 445 | As before, the last value specified for a given option destination is the one |
| 446 | that counts. For clarity, try to use one method or the other of setting default |
| 447 | values, not both. |
| 448 | |
| 449 | |
| 450 | .. _optparse-generating-help: |
| 451 | |
| 452 | Generating help |
| 453 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 454 | |
| 455 | :mod:`optparse`'s ability to generate help and usage text automatically is |
| 456 | useful for creating user-friendly command-line interfaces. All you have to do |
| 457 | is supply a :attr:`help` value for each option, and optionally a short usage |
| 458 | message for your whole program. Here's an OptionParser populated with |
| 459 | user-friendly (documented) options:: |
| 460 | |
| 461 | usage = "usage: %prog [options] arg1 arg2" |
| 462 | parser = OptionParser(usage=usage) |
| 463 | parser.add_option("-v", "--verbose", |
| 464 | action="store_true", dest="verbose", default=True, |
| 465 | help="make lots of noise [default]") |
| 466 | parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", |
| 467 | action="store_false", dest="verbose", |
| 468 | help="be vewwy quiet (I'm hunting wabbits)") |
| 469 | parser.add_option("-f", "--filename", |
| 470 | metavar="FILE", help="write output to FILE"), |
| 471 | parser.add_option("-m", "--mode", |
| 472 | default="intermediate", |
| 473 | help="interaction mode: novice, intermediate, " |
| 474 | "or expert [default: %default]") |
| 475 | |
| 476 | If :mod:`optparse` encounters either ``"-h"`` or ``"--help"`` on the |
| 477 | command-line, or if you just call :meth:`parser.print_help`, it prints the |
| 478 | following to standard output:: |
| 479 | |
| 480 | usage: <yourscript> [options] arg1 arg2 |
| 481 | |
| 482 | options: |
| 483 | -h, --help show this help message and exit |
| 484 | -v, --verbose make lots of noise [default] |
| 485 | -q, --quiet be vewwy quiet (I'm hunting wabbits) |
| 486 | -f FILE, --filename=FILE |
| 487 | write output to FILE |
| 488 | -m MODE, --mode=MODE interaction mode: novice, intermediate, or |
| 489 | expert [default: intermediate] |
| 490 | |
| 491 | (If the help output is triggered by a help option, :mod:`optparse` exits after |
| 492 | printing the help text.) |
| 493 | |
| 494 | There's a lot going on here to help :mod:`optparse` generate the best possible |
| 495 | help message: |
| 496 | |
| 497 | * the script defines its own usage message:: |
| 498 | |
| 499 | usage = "usage: %prog [options] arg1 arg2" |
| 500 | |
| 501 | :mod:`optparse` expands ``"%prog"`` in the usage string to the name of the |
| 502 | current program, i.e. ``os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])``. The expanded string is |
| 503 | then printed before the detailed option help. |
| 504 | |
| 505 | If you don't supply a usage string, :mod:`optparse` uses a bland but sensible |
| 506 | default: ``"usage: %prog [options]"``, which is fine if your script doesn't take |
| 507 | any positional arguments. |
| 508 | |
| 509 | * every option defines a help string, and doesn't worry about line-wrapping--- |
| 510 | :mod:`optparse` takes care of wrapping lines and making the help output look |
| 511 | good. |
| 512 | |
| 513 | * options that take a value indicate this fact in their automatically-generated |
| 514 | help message, e.g. for the "mode" option:: |
| 515 | |
| 516 | -m MODE, --mode=MODE |
| 517 | |
| 518 | Here, "MODE" is called the meta-variable: it stands for the argument that the |
| 519 | user is expected to supply to :option:`-m`/:option:`--mode`. By default, |
| 520 | :mod:`optparse` converts the destination variable name to uppercase and uses |
| 521 | that for the meta-variable. Sometimes, that's not what you want---for example, |
| 522 | the :option:`--filename` option explicitly sets ``metavar="FILE"``, resulting in |
| 523 | this automatically-generated option description:: |
| 524 | |
| 525 | -f FILE, --filename=FILE |
| 526 | |
| 527 | This is important for more than just saving space, though: the manually written |
| 528 | help text uses the meta-variable "FILE" to clue the user in that there's a |
| 529 | connection between the semi-formal syntax "-f FILE" and the informal semantic |
| 530 | description "write output to FILE". This is a simple but effective way to make |
| 531 | your help text a lot clearer and more useful for end users. |
| 532 | |
| 533 | * options that have a default value can include ``%default`` in the help |
| 534 | string---\ :mod:`optparse` will replace it with :func:`str` of the option's |
| 535 | default value. If an option has no default value (or the default value is |
| 536 | ``None``), ``%default`` expands to ``none``. |
| 537 | |
Christian Heimes | fdab48e | 2008-01-20 09:06:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 538 | When dealing with many options, it is convenient to group these |
| 539 | options for better help output. An :class:`OptionParser` can contain |
| 540 | several option groups, each of which can contain several options. |
| 541 | |
| 542 | Continuing with the parser defined above, adding an |
| 543 | :class:`OptionGroup` to a parser is easy:: |
| 544 | |
| 545 | group = OptionGroup(parser, "Dangerous Options", |
| 546 | "Caution: use these options at your own risk. " |
| 547 | "It is believed that some of them bite.") |
| 548 | group.add_option("-g", action="store_true", help="Group option.") |
| 549 | parser.add_option_group(group) |
| 550 | |
| 551 | This would result in the following help output:: |
| 552 | |
| 553 | usage: [options] arg1 arg2 |
| 554 | |
| 555 | options: |
| 556 | -h, --help show this help message and exit |
| 557 | -v, --verbose make lots of noise [default] |
| 558 | -q, --quiet be vewwy quiet (I'm hunting wabbits) |
| 559 | -fFILE, --file=FILE write output to FILE |
| 560 | -mMODE, --mode=MODE interaction mode: one of 'novice', 'intermediate' |
| 561 | [default], 'expert' |
| 562 | |
| 563 | Dangerous Options: |
| 564 | Caution: use of these options is at your own risk. It is believed that |
| 565 | some of them bite. |
| 566 | -g Group option. |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 567 | |
| 568 | .. _optparse-printing-version-string: |
| 569 | |
| 570 | Printing a version string |
| 571 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 572 | |
| 573 | Similar to the brief usage string, :mod:`optparse` can also print a version |
| 574 | string for your program. You have to supply the string as the ``version`` |
| 575 | argument to OptionParser:: |
| 576 | |
| 577 | parser = OptionParser(usage="%prog [-f] [-q]", version="%prog 1.0") |
| 578 | |
| 579 | ``"%prog"`` is expanded just like it is in ``usage``. Apart from that, |
| 580 | ``version`` can contain anything you like. When you supply it, :mod:`optparse` |
| 581 | automatically adds a ``"--version"`` option to your parser. If it encounters |
| 582 | this option on the command line, it expands your ``version`` string (by |
| 583 | replacing ``"%prog"``), prints it to stdout, and exits. |
| 584 | |
| 585 | For example, if your script is called ``/usr/bin/foo``:: |
| 586 | |
| 587 | $ /usr/bin/foo --version |
| 588 | foo 1.0 |
| 589 | |
| 590 | |
| 591 | .. _optparse-how-optparse-handles-errors: |
| 592 | |
| 593 | How :mod:`optparse` handles errors |
| 594 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 595 | |
| 596 | There are two broad classes of errors that :mod:`optparse` has to worry about: |
| 597 | programmer errors and user errors. Programmer errors are usually erroneous |
| 598 | calls to ``parser.add_option()``, e.g. invalid option strings, unknown option |
| 599 | attributes, missing option attributes, etc. These are dealt with in the usual |
| 600 | way: raise an exception (either ``optparse.OptionError`` or ``TypeError``) and |
| 601 | let the program crash. |
| 602 | |
| 603 | Handling user errors is much more important, since they are guaranteed to happen |
| 604 | no matter how stable your code is. :mod:`optparse` can automatically detect |
| 605 | some user errors, such as bad option arguments (passing ``"-n 4x"`` where |
| 606 | :option:`-n` takes an integer argument), missing arguments (``"-n"`` at the end |
| 607 | of the command line, where :option:`-n` takes an argument of any type). Also, |
| 608 | you can call ``parser.error()`` to signal an application-defined error |
| 609 | condition:: |
| 610 | |
| 611 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args() |
| 612 | [...] |
| 613 | if options.a and options.b: |
| 614 | parser.error("options -a and -b are mutually exclusive") |
| 615 | |
| 616 | In either case, :mod:`optparse` handles the error the same way: it prints the |
| 617 | program's usage message and an error message to standard error and exits with |
| 618 | error status 2. |
| 619 | |
| 620 | Consider the first example above, where the user passes ``"4x"`` to an option |
| 621 | that takes an integer:: |
| 622 | |
| 623 | $ /usr/bin/foo -n 4x |
| 624 | usage: foo [options] |
| 625 | |
| 626 | foo: error: option -n: invalid integer value: '4x' |
| 627 | |
| 628 | Or, where the user fails to pass a value at all:: |
| 629 | |
| 630 | $ /usr/bin/foo -n |
| 631 | usage: foo [options] |
| 632 | |
| 633 | foo: error: -n option requires an argument |
| 634 | |
| 635 | :mod:`optparse`\ -generated error messages take care always to mention the |
| 636 | option involved in the error; be sure to do the same when calling |
| 637 | ``parser.error()`` from your application code. |
| 638 | |
| 639 | If :mod:`optparse`'s default error-handling behaviour does not suite your needs, |
| 640 | you'll need to subclass OptionParser and override ``exit()`` and/or |
| 641 | :meth:`error`. |
| 642 | |
| 643 | |
| 644 | .. _optparse-putting-it-all-together: |
| 645 | |
| 646 | Putting it all together |
| 647 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 648 | |
| 649 | Here's what :mod:`optparse`\ -based scripts usually look like:: |
| 650 | |
| 651 | from optparse import OptionParser |
| 652 | [...] |
| 653 | def main(): |
| 654 | usage = "usage: %prog [options] arg" |
| 655 | parser = OptionParser(usage) |
| 656 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", dest="filename", |
| 657 | help="read data from FILENAME") |
| 658 | parser.add_option("-v", "--verbose", |
| 659 | action="store_true", dest="verbose") |
| 660 | parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", |
| 661 | action="store_false", dest="verbose") |
| 662 | [...] |
| 663 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args() |
| 664 | if len(args) != 1: |
| 665 | parser.error("incorrect number of arguments") |
| 666 | if options.verbose: |
Georg Brandl | 6911e3c | 2007-09-04 07:15:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 667 | print("reading %s..." % options.filename) |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 668 | [...] |
| 669 | |
| 670 | if __name__ == "__main__": |
| 671 | main() |
| 672 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 673 | |
| 674 | .. _optparse-reference-guide: |
| 675 | |
| 676 | Reference Guide |
| 677 | --------------- |
| 678 | |
| 679 | |
| 680 | .. _optparse-creating-parser: |
| 681 | |
| 682 | Creating the parser |
| 683 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 684 | |
| 685 | The first step in using :mod:`optparse` is to create an OptionParser instance:: |
| 686 | |
| 687 | parser = OptionParser(...) |
| 688 | |
| 689 | The OptionParser constructor has no required arguments, but a number of optional |
| 690 | keyword arguments. You should always pass them as keyword arguments, i.e. do |
| 691 | not rely on the order in which the arguments are declared. |
| 692 | |
| 693 | ``usage`` (default: ``"%prog [options]"``) |
| 694 | The usage summary to print when your program is run incorrectly or with a help |
| 695 | option. When :mod:`optparse` prints the usage string, it expands ``%prog`` to |
| 696 | ``os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])`` (or to ``prog`` if you passed that keyword |
| 697 | argument). To suppress a usage message, pass the special value |
| 698 | ``optparse.SUPPRESS_USAGE``. |
| 699 | |
| 700 | ``option_list`` (default: ``[]``) |
| 701 | A list of Option objects to populate the parser with. The options in |
| 702 | ``option_list`` are added after any options in ``standard_option_list`` (a class |
| 703 | attribute that may be set by OptionParser subclasses), but before any version or |
| 704 | help options. Deprecated; use :meth:`add_option` after creating the parser |
| 705 | instead. |
| 706 | |
| 707 | ``option_class`` (default: optparse.Option) |
| 708 | Class to use when adding options to the parser in :meth:`add_option`. |
| 709 | |
| 710 | ``version`` (default: ``None``) |
| 711 | A version string to print when the user supplies a version option. If you supply |
| 712 | a true value for ``version``, :mod:`optparse` automatically adds a version |
| 713 | option with the single option string ``"--version"``. The substring ``"%prog"`` |
| 714 | is expanded the same as for ``usage``. |
| 715 | |
| 716 | ``conflict_handler`` (default: ``"error"``) |
| 717 | Specifies what to do when options with conflicting option strings are added to |
| 718 | the parser; see section :ref:`optparse-conflicts-between-options`. |
| 719 | |
| 720 | ``description`` (default: ``None``) |
| 721 | A paragraph of text giving a brief overview of your program. :mod:`optparse` |
| 722 | reformats this paragraph to fit the current terminal width and prints it when |
| 723 | the user requests help (after ``usage``, but before the list of options). |
| 724 | |
| 725 | ``formatter`` (default: a new IndentedHelpFormatter) |
| 726 | An instance of optparse.HelpFormatter that will be used for printing help text. |
| 727 | :mod:`optparse` provides two concrete classes for this purpose: |
| 728 | IndentedHelpFormatter and TitledHelpFormatter. |
| 729 | |
| 730 | ``add_help_option`` (default: ``True``) |
| 731 | If true, :mod:`optparse` will add a help option (with option strings ``"-h"`` |
| 732 | and ``"--help"``) to the parser. |
| 733 | |
| 734 | ``prog`` |
| 735 | The string to use when expanding ``"%prog"`` in ``usage`` and ``version`` |
| 736 | instead of ``os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])``. |
| 737 | |
| 738 | |
| 739 | |
| 740 | .. _optparse-populating-parser: |
| 741 | |
| 742 | Populating the parser |
| 743 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 744 | |
| 745 | There are several ways to populate the parser with options. The preferred way |
| 746 | is by using ``OptionParser.add_option()``, as shown in section |
| 747 | :ref:`optparse-tutorial`. :meth:`add_option` can be called in one of two ways: |
| 748 | |
| 749 | * pass it an Option instance (as returned by :func:`make_option`) |
| 750 | |
| 751 | * pass it any combination of positional and keyword arguments that are |
| 752 | acceptable to :func:`make_option` (i.e., to the Option constructor), and it will |
| 753 | create the Option instance for you |
| 754 | |
| 755 | The other alternative is to pass a list of pre-constructed Option instances to |
| 756 | the OptionParser constructor, as in:: |
| 757 | |
| 758 | option_list = [ |
| 759 | make_option("-f", "--filename", |
| 760 | action="store", type="string", dest="filename"), |
| 761 | make_option("-q", "--quiet", |
| 762 | action="store_false", dest="verbose"), |
| 763 | ] |
| 764 | parser = OptionParser(option_list=option_list) |
| 765 | |
| 766 | (:func:`make_option` is a factory function for creating Option instances; |
| 767 | currently it is an alias for the Option constructor. A future version of |
| 768 | :mod:`optparse` may split Option into several classes, and :func:`make_option` |
| 769 | will pick the right class to instantiate. Do not instantiate Option directly.) |
| 770 | |
| 771 | |
| 772 | .. _optparse-defining-options: |
| 773 | |
| 774 | Defining options |
| 775 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 776 | |
| 777 | Each Option instance represents a set of synonymous command-line option strings, |
| 778 | e.g. :option:`-f` and :option:`--file`. You can specify any number of short or |
| 779 | long option strings, but you must specify at least one overall option string. |
| 780 | |
| 781 | The canonical way to create an Option instance is with the :meth:`add_option` |
| 782 | method of :class:`OptionParser`:: |
| 783 | |
| 784 | parser.add_option(opt_str[, ...], attr=value, ...) |
| 785 | |
| 786 | To define an option with only a short option string:: |
| 787 | |
| 788 | parser.add_option("-f", attr=value, ...) |
| 789 | |
| 790 | And to define an option with only a long option string:: |
| 791 | |
| 792 | parser.add_option("--foo", attr=value, ...) |
| 793 | |
| 794 | The keyword arguments define attributes of the new Option object. The most |
| 795 | important option attribute is :attr:`action`, and it largely determines which |
| 796 | other attributes are relevant or required. If you pass irrelevant option |
| 797 | attributes, or fail to pass required ones, :mod:`optparse` raises an OptionError |
| 798 | exception explaining your mistake. |
| 799 | |
| 800 | An options's *action* determines what :mod:`optparse` does when it encounters |
| 801 | this option on the command-line. The standard option actions hard-coded into |
| 802 | :mod:`optparse` are: |
| 803 | |
| 804 | ``store`` |
| 805 | store this option's argument (default) |
| 806 | |
| 807 | ``store_const`` |
| 808 | store a constant value |
| 809 | |
| 810 | ``store_true`` |
| 811 | store a true value |
| 812 | |
| 813 | ``store_false`` |
| 814 | store a false value |
| 815 | |
| 816 | ``append`` |
| 817 | append this option's argument to a list |
| 818 | |
| 819 | ``append_const`` |
| 820 | append a constant value to a list |
| 821 | |
| 822 | ``count`` |
| 823 | increment a counter by one |
| 824 | |
| 825 | ``callback`` |
| 826 | call a specified function |
| 827 | |
| 828 | :attr:`help` |
| 829 | print a usage message including all options and the documentation for them |
| 830 | |
| 831 | (If you don't supply an action, the default is ``store``. For this action, you |
| 832 | may also supply :attr:`type` and :attr:`dest` option attributes; see below.) |
| 833 | |
| 834 | As you can see, most actions involve storing or updating a value somewhere. |
| 835 | :mod:`optparse` always creates a special object for this, conventionally called |
| 836 | ``options`` (it happens to be an instance of ``optparse.Values``). Option |
| 837 | arguments (and various other values) are stored as attributes of this object, |
| 838 | according to the :attr:`dest` (destination) option attribute. |
| 839 | |
| 840 | For example, when you call :: |
| 841 | |
| 842 | parser.parse_args() |
| 843 | |
| 844 | one of the first things :mod:`optparse` does is create the ``options`` object:: |
| 845 | |
| 846 | options = Values() |
| 847 | |
| 848 | If one of the options in this parser is defined with :: |
| 849 | |
| 850 | parser.add_option("-f", "--file", action="store", type="string", dest="filename") |
| 851 | |
| 852 | and the command-line being parsed includes any of the following:: |
| 853 | |
| 854 | -ffoo |
| 855 | -f foo |
| 856 | --file=foo |
| 857 | --file foo |
| 858 | |
| 859 | then :mod:`optparse`, on seeing this option, will do the equivalent of :: |
| 860 | |
| 861 | options.filename = "foo" |
| 862 | |
| 863 | The :attr:`type` and :attr:`dest` option attributes are almost as important as |
| 864 | :attr:`action`, but :attr:`action` is the only one that makes sense for *all* |
| 865 | options. |
| 866 | |
| 867 | |
| 868 | .. _optparse-standard-option-actions: |
| 869 | |
| 870 | Standard option actions |
| 871 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 872 | |
| 873 | The various option actions all have slightly different requirements and effects. |
| 874 | Most actions have several relevant option attributes which you may specify to |
| 875 | guide :mod:`optparse`'s behaviour; a few have required attributes, which you |
| 876 | must specify for any option using that action. |
| 877 | |
| 878 | * ``store`` [relevant: :attr:`type`, :attr:`dest`, ``nargs``, ``choices``] |
| 879 | |
| 880 | The option must be followed by an argument, which is converted to a value |
| 881 | according to :attr:`type` and stored in :attr:`dest`. If ``nargs`` > 1, |
| 882 | multiple arguments will be consumed from the command line; all will be converted |
| 883 | according to :attr:`type` and stored to :attr:`dest` as a tuple. See the |
| 884 | "Option types" section below. |
| 885 | |
| 886 | If ``choices`` is supplied (a list or tuple of strings), the type defaults to |
| 887 | ``choice``. |
| 888 | |
| 889 | If :attr:`type` is not supplied, it defaults to ``string``. |
| 890 | |
| 891 | If :attr:`dest` is not supplied, :mod:`optparse` derives a destination from the |
| 892 | first long option string (e.g., ``"--foo-bar"`` implies ``foo_bar``). If there |
| 893 | are no long option strings, :mod:`optparse` derives a destination from the first |
| 894 | short option string (e.g., ``"-f"`` implies ``f``). |
| 895 | |
| 896 | Example:: |
| 897 | |
| 898 | parser.add_option("-f") |
| 899 | parser.add_option("-p", type="float", nargs=3, dest="point") |
| 900 | |
| 901 | As it parses the command line :: |
| 902 | |
| 903 | -f foo.txt -p 1 -3.5 4 -fbar.txt |
| 904 | |
| 905 | :mod:`optparse` will set :: |
| 906 | |
| 907 | options.f = "foo.txt" |
| 908 | options.point = (1.0, -3.5, 4.0) |
| 909 | options.f = "bar.txt" |
| 910 | |
| 911 | * ``store_const`` [required: ``const``; relevant: :attr:`dest`] |
| 912 | |
| 913 | The value ``const`` is stored in :attr:`dest`. |
| 914 | |
| 915 | Example:: |
| 916 | |
| 917 | parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", |
| 918 | action="store_const", const=0, dest="verbose") |
| 919 | parser.add_option("-v", "--verbose", |
| 920 | action="store_const", const=1, dest="verbose") |
| 921 | parser.add_option("--noisy", |
| 922 | action="store_const", const=2, dest="verbose") |
| 923 | |
| 924 | If ``"--noisy"`` is seen, :mod:`optparse` will set :: |
| 925 | |
| 926 | options.verbose = 2 |
| 927 | |
| 928 | * ``store_true`` [relevant: :attr:`dest`] |
| 929 | |
| 930 | A special case of ``store_const`` that stores a true value to :attr:`dest`. |
| 931 | |
| 932 | * ``store_false`` [relevant: :attr:`dest`] |
| 933 | |
| 934 | Like ``store_true``, but stores a false value. |
| 935 | |
| 936 | Example:: |
| 937 | |
| 938 | parser.add_option("--clobber", action="store_true", dest="clobber") |
| 939 | parser.add_option("--no-clobber", action="store_false", dest="clobber") |
| 940 | |
| 941 | * ``append`` [relevant: :attr:`type`, :attr:`dest`, ``nargs``, ``choices``] |
| 942 | |
| 943 | The option must be followed by an argument, which is appended to the list in |
| 944 | :attr:`dest`. If no default value for :attr:`dest` is supplied, an empty list |
| 945 | is automatically created when :mod:`optparse` first encounters this option on |
| 946 | the command-line. If ``nargs`` > 1, multiple arguments are consumed, and a |
| 947 | tuple of length ``nargs`` is appended to :attr:`dest`. |
| 948 | |
| 949 | The defaults for :attr:`type` and :attr:`dest` are the same as for the ``store`` |
| 950 | action. |
| 951 | |
| 952 | Example:: |
| 953 | |
| 954 | parser.add_option("-t", "--tracks", action="append", type="int") |
| 955 | |
| 956 | If ``"-t3"`` is seen on the command-line, :mod:`optparse` does the equivalent |
| 957 | of:: |
| 958 | |
| 959 | options.tracks = [] |
| 960 | options.tracks.append(int("3")) |
| 961 | |
| 962 | If, a little later on, ``"--tracks=4"`` is seen, it does:: |
| 963 | |
| 964 | options.tracks.append(int("4")) |
| 965 | |
| 966 | * ``append_const`` [required: ``const``; relevant: :attr:`dest`] |
| 967 | |
| 968 | Like ``store_const``, but the value ``const`` is appended to :attr:`dest`; as |
Georg Brandl | 9afde1c | 2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 969 | with ``append``, :attr:`dest` defaults to ``None``, and an empty list is |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 970 | automatically created the first time the option is encountered. |
| 971 | |
| 972 | * ``count`` [relevant: :attr:`dest`] |
| 973 | |
| 974 | Increment the integer stored at :attr:`dest`. If no default value is supplied, |
| 975 | :attr:`dest` is set to zero before being incremented the first time. |
| 976 | |
| 977 | Example:: |
| 978 | |
| 979 | parser.add_option("-v", action="count", dest="verbosity") |
| 980 | |
| 981 | The first time ``"-v"`` is seen on the command line, :mod:`optparse` does the |
| 982 | equivalent of:: |
| 983 | |
| 984 | options.verbosity = 0 |
| 985 | options.verbosity += 1 |
| 986 | |
| 987 | Every subsequent occurrence of ``"-v"`` results in :: |
| 988 | |
| 989 | options.verbosity += 1 |
| 990 | |
| 991 | * ``callback`` [required: ``callback``; relevant: :attr:`type`, ``nargs``, |
| 992 | ``callback_args``, ``callback_kwargs``] |
| 993 | |
| 994 | Call the function specified by ``callback``, which is called as :: |
| 995 | |
| 996 | func(option, opt_str, value, parser, *args, **kwargs) |
| 997 | |
| 998 | See section :ref:`optparse-option-callbacks` for more detail. |
| 999 | |
| 1000 | * :attr:`help` |
| 1001 | |
| 1002 | Prints a complete help message for all the options in the current option parser. |
| 1003 | The help message is constructed from the ``usage`` string passed to |
| 1004 | OptionParser's constructor and the :attr:`help` string passed to every option. |
| 1005 | |
| 1006 | If no :attr:`help` string is supplied for an option, it will still be listed in |
| 1007 | the help message. To omit an option entirely, use the special value |
| 1008 | ``optparse.SUPPRESS_HELP``. |
| 1009 | |
| 1010 | :mod:`optparse` automatically adds a :attr:`help` option to all OptionParsers, |
| 1011 | so you do not normally need to create one. |
| 1012 | |
| 1013 | Example:: |
| 1014 | |
| 1015 | from optparse import OptionParser, SUPPRESS_HELP |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 | parser = OptionParser() |
| 1018 | parser.add_option("-h", "--help", action="help"), |
| 1019 | parser.add_option("-v", action="store_true", dest="verbose", |
| 1020 | help="Be moderately verbose") |
| 1021 | parser.add_option("--file", dest="filename", |
| 1022 | help="Input file to read data from"), |
| 1023 | parser.add_option("--secret", help=SUPPRESS_HELP) |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 | If :mod:`optparse` sees either ``"-h"`` or ``"--help"`` on the command line, it |
| 1026 | will print something like the following help message to stdout (assuming |
| 1027 | ``sys.argv[0]`` is ``"foo.py"``):: |
| 1028 | |
| 1029 | usage: foo.py [options] |
| 1030 | |
| 1031 | options: |
| 1032 | -h, --help Show this help message and exit |
| 1033 | -v Be moderately verbose |
| 1034 | --file=FILENAME Input file to read data from |
| 1035 | |
| 1036 | After printing the help message, :mod:`optparse` terminates your process with |
| 1037 | ``sys.exit(0)``. |
| 1038 | |
| 1039 | * ``version`` |
| 1040 | |
| 1041 | Prints the version number supplied to the OptionParser to stdout and exits. The |
| 1042 | version number is actually formatted and printed by the ``print_version()`` |
| 1043 | method of OptionParser. Generally only relevant if the ``version`` argument is |
| 1044 | supplied to the OptionParser constructor. As with :attr:`help` options, you |
| 1045 | will rarely create ``version`` options, since :mod:`optparse` automatically adds |
| 1046 | them when needed. |
| 1047 | |
| 1048 | |
| 1049 | .. _optparse-option-attributes: |
| 1050 | |
| 1051 | Option attributes |
| 1052 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1053 | |
| 1054 | The following option attributes may be passed as keyword arguments to |
| 1055 | ``parser.add_option()``. If you pass an option attribute that is not relevant |
| 1056 | to a particular option, or fail to pass a required option attribute, |
| 1057 | :mod:`optparse` raises OptionError. |
| 1058 | |
| 1059 | * :attr:`action` (default: ``"store"``) |
| 1060 | |
| 1061 | Determines :mod:`optparse`'s behaviour when this option is seen on the command |
| 1062 | line; the available options are documented above. |
| 1063 | |
| 1064 | * :attr:`type` (default: ``"string"``) |
| 1065 | |
| 1066 | The argument type expected by this option (e.g., ``"string"`` or ``"int"``); the |
| 1067 | available option types are documented below. |
| 1068 | |
| 1069 | * :attr:`dest` (default: derived from option strings) |
| 1070 | |
| 1071 | If the option's action implies writing or modifying a value somewhere, this |
| 1072 | tells :mod:`optparse` where to write it: :attr:`dest` names an attribute of the |
| 1073 | ``options`` object that :mod:`optparse` builds as it parses the command line. |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | * ``default`` (deprecated) |
| 1076 | |
| 1077 | The value to use for this option's destination if the option is not seen on the |
| 1078 | command line. Deprecated; use ``parser.set_defaults()`` instead. |
| 1079 | |
| 1080 | * ``nargs`` (default: 1) |
| 1081 | |
| 1082 | How many arguments of type :attr:`type` should be consumed when this option is |
| 1083 | seen. If > 1, :mod:`optparse` will store a tuple of values to :attr:`dest`. |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | * ``const`` |
| 1086 | |
| 1087 | For actions that store a constant value, the constant value to store. |
| 1088 | |
| 1089 | * ``choices`` |
| 1090 | |
| 1091 | For options of type ``"choice"``, the list of strings the user may choose from. |
| 1092 | |
| 1093 | * ``callback`` |
| 1094 | |
| 1095 | For options with action ``"callback"``, the callable to call when this option |
| 1096 | is seen. See section :ref:`optparse-option-callbacks` for detail on the |
| 1097 | arguments passed to ``callable``. |
| 1098 | |
| 1099 | * ``callback_args``, ``callback_kwargs`` |
| 1100 | |
| 1101 | Additional positional and keyword arguments to pass to ``callback`` after the |
| 1102 | four standard callback arguments. |
| 1103 | |
| 1104 | * :attr:`help` |
| 1105 | |
| 1106 | Help text to print for this option when listing all available options after the |
| 1107 | user supplies a :attr:`help` option (such as ``"--help"``). If no help text is |
| 1108 | supplied, the option will be listed without help text. To hide this option, use |
| 1109 | the special value ``SUPPRESS_HELP``. |
| 1110 | |
| 1111 | * ``metavar`` (default: derived from option strings) |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 | Stand-in for the option argument(s) to use when printing help text. See section |
| 1114 | :ref:`optparse-tutorial` for an example. |
| 1115 | |
| 1116 | |
| 1117 | .. _optparse-standard-option-types: |
| 1118 | |
| 1119 | Standard option types |
| 1120 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1121 | |
Georg Brandl | 5c10664 | 2007-11-29 17:41:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1122 | :mod:`optparse` has five built-in option types: ``string``, ``int``, |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1123 | ``choice``, ``float`` and ``complex``. If you need to add new option types, see |
| 1124 | section :ref:`optparse-extending-optparse`. |
| 1125 | |
| 1126 | Arguments to string options are not checked or converted in any way: the text on |
| 1127 | the command line is stored in the destination (or passed to the callback) as-is. |
| 1128 | |
Georg Brandl | 5c10664 | 2007-11-29 17:41:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1129 | Integer arguments (type ``int``) are parsed as follows: |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1130 | |
| 1131 | * if the number starts with ``0x``, it is parsed as a hexadecimal number |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 | * if the number starts with ``0``, it is parsed as an octal number |
| 1134 | |
Georg Brandl | 9afde1c | 2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1135 | * if the number starts with ``0b``, it is parsed as a binary number |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1136 | |
| 1137 | * otherwise, the number is parsed as a decimal number |
| 1138 | |
| 1139 | |
Georg Brandl | 5c10664 | 2007-11-29 17:41:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1140 | The conversion is done by calling ``int()`` with the appropriate base (2, 8, 10, |
| 1141 | or 16). If this fails, so will :mod:`optparse`, although with a more useful |
| 1142 | error message. |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1143 | |
| 1144 | ``float`` and ``complex`` option arguments are converted directly with |
| 1145 | ``float()`` and ``complex()``, with similar error-handling. |
| 1146 | |
| 1147 | ``choice`` options are a subtype of ``string`` options. The ``choices`` option |
| 1148 | attribute (a sequence of strings) defines the set of allowed option arguments. |
| 1149 | ``optparse.check_choice()`` compares user-supplied option arguments against this |
| 1150 | master list and raises OptionValueError if an invalid string is given. |
| 1151 | |
| 1152 | |
| 1153 | .. _optparse-parsing-arguments: |
| 1154 | |
| 1155 | Parsing arguments |
| 1156 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1157 | |
| 1158 | The whole point of creating and populating an OptionParser is to call its |
| 1159 | :meth:`parse_args` method:: |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args(args=None, values=None) |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 | where the input parameters are |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 | ``args`` |
| 1166 | the list of arguments to process (default: ``sys.argv[1:]``) |
| 1167 | |
| 1168 | ``values`` |
| 1169 | object to store option arguments in (default: a new instance of optparse.Values) |
| 1170 | |
| 1171 | and the return values are |
| 1172 | |
| 1173 | ``options`` |
| 1174 | the same object that was passed in as ``options``, or the optparse.Values |
| 1175 | instance created by :mod:`optparse` |
| 1176 | |
| 1177 | ``args`` |
| 1178 | the leftover positional arguments after all options have been processed |
| 1179 | |
| 1180 | The most common usage is to supply neither keyword argument. If you supply |
| 1181 | ``options``, it will be modified with repeated ``setattr()`` calls (roughly one |
| 1182 | for every option argument stored to an option destination) and returned by |
| 1183 | :meth:`parse_args`. |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 | If :meth:`parse_args` encounters any errors in the argument list, it calls the |
| 1186 | OptionParser's :meth:`error` method with an appropriate end-user error message. |
| 1187 | This ultimately terminates your process with an exit status of 2 (the |
| 1188 | traditional Unix exit status for command-line errors). |
| 1189 | |
| 1190 | |
| 1191 | .. _optparse-querying-manipulating-option-parser: |
| 1192 | |
| 1193 | Querying and manipulating your option parser |
| 1194 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1195 | |
| 1196 | Sometimes, it's useful to poke around your option parser and see what's there. |
| 1197 | OptionParser provides a couple of methods to help you out: |
| 1198 | |
| 1199 | ``has_option(opt_str)`` |
| 1200 | Return true if the OptionParser has an option with option string ``opt_str`` |
| 1201 | (e.g., ``"-q"`` or ``"--verbose"``). |
| 1202 | |
| 1203 | ``get_option(opt_str)`` |
| 1204 | Returns the Option instance with the option string ``opt_str``, or ``None`` if |
| 1205 | no options have that option string. |
| 1206 | |
| 1207 | ``remove_option(opt_str)`` |
| 1208 | If the OptionParser has an option corresponding to ``opt_str``, that option is |
| 1209 | removed. If that option provided any other option strings, all of those option |
| 1210 | strings become invalid. If ``opt_str`` does not occur in any option belonging to |
| 1211 | this OptionParser, raises ValueError. |
| 1212 | |
| 1213 | |
| 1214 | .. _optparse-conflicts-between-options: |
| 1215 | |
| 1216 | Conflicts between options |
| 1217 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1218 | |
| 1219 | If you're not careful, it's easy to define options with conflicting option |
| 1220 | strings:: |
| 1221 | |
| 1222 | parser.add_option("-n", "--dry-run", ...) |
| 1223 | [...] |
| 1224 | parser.add_option("-n", "--noisy", ...) |
| 1225 | |
| 1226 | (This is particularly true if you've defined your own OptionParser subclass with |
| 1227 | some standard options.) |
| 1228 | |
| 1229 | Every time you add an option, :mod:`optparse` checks for conflicts with existing |
| 1230 | options. If it finds any, it invokes the current conflict-handling mechanism. |
| 1231 | You can set the conflict-handling mechanism either in the constructor:: |
| 1232 | |
| 1233 | parser = OptionParser(..., conflict_handler=handler) |
| 1234 | |
| 1235 | or with a separate call:: |
| 1236 | |
| 1237 | parser.set_conflict_handler(handler) |
| 1238 | |
| 1239 | The available conflict handlers are: |
| 1240 | |
| 1241 | ``error`` (default) |
| 1242 | assume option conflicts are a programming error and raise OptionConflictError |
| 1243 | |
| 1244 | ``resolve`` |
| 1245 | resolve option conflicts intelligently (see below) |
| 1246 | |
| 1247 | |
| 1248 | As an example, let's define an OptionParser that resolves conflicts |
| 1249 | intelligently and add conflicting options to it:: |
| 1250 | |
| 1251 | parser = OptionParser(conflict_handler="resolve") |
| 1252 | parser.add_option("-n", "--dry-run", ..., help="do no harm") |
| 1253 | parser.add_option("-n", "--noisy", ..., help="be noisy") |
| 1254 | |
| 1255 | At this point, :mod:`optparse` detects that a previously-added option is already |
| 1256 | using the ``"-n"`` option string. Since ``conflict_handler`` is ``"resolve"``, |
| 1257 | it resolves the situation by removing ``"-n"`` from the earlier option's list of |
| 1258 | option strings. Now ``"--dry-run"`` is the only way for the user to activate |
| 1259 | that option. If the user asks for help, the help message will reflect that:: |
| 1260 | |
| 1261 | options: |
| 1262 | --dry-run do no harm |
| 1263 | [...] |
| 1264 | -n, --noisy be noisy |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 | It's possible to whittle away the option strings for a previously-added option |
| 1267 | until there are none left, and the user has no way of invoking that option from |
| 1268 | the command-line. In that case, :mod:`optparse` removes that option completely, |
| 1269 | so it doesn't show up in help text or anywhere else. Carrying on with our |
| 1270 | existing OptionParser:: |
| 1271 | |
| 1272 | parser.add_option("--dry-run", ..., help="new dry-run option") |
| 1273 | |
| 1274 | At this point, the original :option:`-n/--dry-run` option is no longer |
| 1275 | accessible, so :mod:`optparse` removes it, leaving this help text:: |
| 1276 | |
| 1277 | options: |
| 1278 | [...] |
| 1279 | -n, --noisy be noisy |
| 1280 | --dry-run new dry-run option |
| 1281 | |
| 1282 | |
| 1283 | .. _optparse-cleanup: |
| 1284 | |
| 1285 | Cleanup |
| 1286 | ^^^^^^^ |
| 1287 | |
| 1288 | OptionParser instances have several cyclic references. This should not be a |
| 1289 | problem for Python's garbage collector, but you may wish to break the cyclic |
| 1290 | references explicitly by calling ``destroy()`` on your OptionParser once you are |
| 1291 | done with it. This is particularly useful in long-running applications where |
| 1292 | large object graphs are reachable from your OptionParser. |
| 1293 | |
| 1294 | |
| 1295 | .. _optparse-other-methods: |
| 1296 | |
| 1297 | Other methods |
| 1298 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | OptionParser supports several other public methods: |
| 1301 | |
| 1302 | * ``set_usage(usage)`` |
| 1303 | |
| 1304 | Set the usage string according to the rules described above for the ``usage`` |
| 1305 | constructor keyword argument. Passing ``None`` sets the default usage string; |
| 1306 | use ``SUPPRESS_USAGE`` to suppress a usage message. |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 | * ``enable_interspersed_args()``, ``disable_interspersed_args()`` |
| 1309 | |
| 1310 | Enable/disable positional arguments interspersed with options, similar to GNU |
| 1311 | getopt (enabled by default). For example, if ``"-a"`` and ``"-b"`` are both |
| 1312 | simple options that take no arguments, :mod:`optparse` normally accepts this |
| 1313 | syntax:: |
| 1314 | |
| 1315 | prog -a arg1 -b arg2 |
| 1316 | |
| 1317 | and treats it as equivalent to :: |
| 1318 | |
| 1319 | prog -a -b arg1 arg2 |
| 1320 | |
| 1321 | To disable this feature, call ``disable_interspersed_args()``. This restores |
| 1322 | traditional Unix syntax, where option parsing stops with the first non-option |
| 1323 | argument. |
| 1324 | |
| 1325 | * ``set_defaults(dest=value, ...)`` |
| 1326 | |
| 1327 | Set default values for several option destinations at once. Using |
| 1328 | :meth:`set_defaults` is the preferred way to set default values for options, |
| 1329 | since multiple options can share the same destination. For example, if several |
| 1330 | "mode" options all set the same destination, any one of them can set the |
| 1331 | default, and the last one wins:: |
| 1332 | |
| 1333 | parser.add_option("--advanced", action="store_const", |
| 1334 | dest="mode", const="advanced", |
| 1335 | default="novice") # overridden below |
| 1336 | parser.add_option("--novice", action="store_const", |
| 1337 | dest="mode", const="novice", |
| 1338 | default="advanced") # overrides above setting |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 | To avoid this confusion, use :meth:`set_defaults`:: |
| 1341 | |
| 1342 | parser.set_defaults(mode="advanced") |
| 1343 | parser.add_option("--advanced", action="store_const", |
| 1344 | dest="mode", const="advanced") |
| 1345 | parser.add_option("--novice", action="store_const", |
| 1346 | dest="mode", const="novice") |
| 1347 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1348 | |
| 1349 | .. _optparse-option-callbacks: |
| 1350 | |
| 1351 | Option Callbacks |
| 1352 | ---------------- |
| 1353 | |
| 1354 | When :mod:`optparse`'s built-in actions and types aren't quite enough for your |
| 1355 | needs, you have two choices: extend :mod:`optparse` or define a callback option. |
| 1356 | Extending :mod:`optparse` is more general, but overkill for a lot of simple |
| 1357 | cases. Quite often a simple callback is all you need. |
| 1358 | |
| 1359 | There are two steps to defining a callback option: |
| 1360 | |
| 1361 | * define the option itself using the ``callback`` action |
| 1362 | |
| 1363 | * write the callback; this is a function (or method) that takes at least four |
| 1364 | arguments, as described below |
| 1365 | |
| 1366 | |
| 1367 | .. _optparse-defining-callback-option: |
| 1368 | |
| 1369 | Defining a callback option |
| 1370 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1371 | |
| 1372 | As always, the easiest way to define a callback option is by using the |
| 1373 | ``parser.add_option()`` method. Apart from :attr:`action`, the only option |
| 1374 | attribute you must specify is ``callback``, the function to call:: |
| 1375 | |
| 1376 | parser.add_option("-c", action="callback", callback=my_callback) |
| 1377 | |
| 1378 | ``callback`` is a function (or other callable object), so you must have already |
| 1379 | defined ``my_callback()`` when you create this callback option. In this simple |
| 1380 | case, :mod:`optparse` doesn't even know if :option:`-c` takes any arguments, |
| 1381 | which usually means that the option takes no arguments---the mere presence of |
| 1382 | :option:`-c` on the command-line is all it needs to know. In some |
| 1383 | circumstances, though, you might want your callback to consume an arbitrary |
| 1384 | number of command-line arguments. This is where writing callbacks gets tricky; |
| 1385 | it's covered later in this section. |
| 1386 | |
| 1387 | :mod:`optparse` always passes four particular arguments to your callback, and it |
| 1388 | will only pass additional arguments if you specify them via ``callback_args`` |
| 1389 | and ``callback_kwargs``. Thus, the minimal callback function signature is:: |
| 1390 | |
| 1391 | def my_callback(option, opt, value, parser): |
| 1392 | |
| 1393 | The four arguments to a callback are described below. |
| 1394 | |
| 1395 | There are several other option attributes that you can supply when you define a |
| 1396 | callback option: |
| 1397 | |
| 1398 | :attr:`type` |
| 1399 | has its usual meaning: as with the ``store`` or ``append`` actions, it instructs |
| 1400 | :mod:`optparse` to consume one argument and convert it to :attr:`type`. Rather |
| 1401 | than storing the converted value(s) anywhere, though, :mod:`optparse` passes it |
| 1402 | to your callback function. |
| 1403 | |
| 1404 | ``nargs`` |
| 1405 | also has its usual meaning: if it is supplied and > 1, :mod:`optparse` will |
| 1406 | consume ``nargs`` arguments, each of which must be convertible to :attr:`type`. |
| 1407 | It then passes a tuple of converted values to your callback. |
| 1408 | |
| 1409 | ``callback_args`` |
| 1410 | a tuple of extra positional arguments to pass to the callback |
| 1411 | |
| 1412 | ``callback_kwargs`` |
| 1413 | a dictionary of extra keyword arguments to pass to the callback |
| 1414 | |
| 1415 | |
| 1416 | .. _optparse-how-callbacks-called: |
| 1417 | |
| 1418 | How callbacks are called |
| 1419 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1420 | |
| 1421 | All callbacks are called as follows:: |
| 1422 | |
| 1423 | func(option, opt_str, value, parser, *args, **kwargs) |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 | where |
| 1426 | |
| 1427 | ``option`` |
| 1428 | is the Option instance that's calling the callback |
| 1429 | |
| 1430 | ``opt_str`` |
| 1431 | is the option string seen on the command-line that's triggering the callback. |
| 1432 | (If an abbreviated long option was used, ``opt_str`` will be the full, canonical |
| 1433 | option string---e.g. if the user puts ``"--foo"`` on the command-line as an |
| 1434 | abbreviation for ``"--foobar"``, then ``opt_str`` will be ``"--foobar"``.) |
| 1435 | |
| 1436 | ``value`` |
| 1437 | is the argument to this option seen on the command-line. :mod:`optparse` will |
| 1438 | only expect an argument if :attr:`type` is set; the type of ``value`` will be |
| 1439 | the type implied by the option's type. If :attr:`type` for this option is |
| 1440 | ``None`` (no argument expected), then ``value`` will be ``None``. If ``nargs`` |
| 1441 | > 1, ``value`` will be a tuple of values of the appropriate type. |
| 1442 | |
| 1443 | ``parser`` |
| 1444 | is the OptionParser instance driving the whole thing, mainly useful because you |
| 1445 | can access some other interesting data through its instance attributes: |
| 1446 | |
| 1447 | ``parser.largs`` |
| 1448 | the current list of leftover arguments, ie. arguments that have been consumed |
| 1449 | but are neither options nor option arguments. Feel free to modify |
| 1450 | ``parser.largs``, e.g. by adding more arguments to it. (This list will become |
| 1451 | ``args``, the second return value of :meth:`parse_args`.) |
| 1452 | |
| 1453 | ``parser.rargs`` |
| 1454 | the current list of remaining arguments, ie. with ``opt_str`` and ``value`` (if |
| 1455 | applicable) removed, and only the arguments following them still there. Feel |
| 1456 | free to modify ``parser.rargs``, e.g. by consuming more arguments. |
| 1457 | |
| 1458 | ``parser.values`` |
| 1459 | the object where option values are by default stored (an instance of |
| 1460 | optparse.OptionValues). This lets callbacks use the same mechanism as the rest |
| 1461 | of :mod:`optparse` for storing option values; you don't need to mess around with |
| 1462 | globals or closures. You can also access or modify the value(s) of any options |
| 1463 | already encountered on the command-line. |
| 1464 | |
| 1465 | ``args`` |
| 1466 | is a tuple of arbitrary positional arguments supplied via the ``callback_args`` |
| 1467 | option attribute. |
| 1468 | |
| 1469 | ``kwargs`` |
| 1470 | is a dictionary of arbitrary keyword arguments supplied via ``callback_kwargs``. |
| 1471 | |
| 1472 | |
| 1473 | .. _optparse-raising-errors-in-callback: |
| 1474 | |
| 1475 | Raising errors in a callback |
| 1476 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 | The callback function should raise OptionValueError if there are any problems |
| 1479 | with the option or its argument(s). :mod:`optparse` catches this and terminates |
| 1480 | the program, printing the error message you supply to stderr. Your message |
| 1481 | should be clear, concise, accurate, and mention the option at fault. Otherwise, |
| 1482 | the user will have a hard time figuring out what he did wrong. |
| 1483 | |
| 1484 | |
| 1485 | .. _optparse-callback-example-1: |
| 1486 | |
| 1487 | Callback example 1: trivial callback |
| 1488 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1489 | |
| 1490 | Here's an example of a callback option that takes no arguments, and simply |
| 1491 | records that the option was seen:: |
| 1492 | |
| 1493 | def record_foo_seen(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1494 | parser.saw_foo = True |
| 1495 | |
| 1496 | parser.add_option("--foo", action="callback", callback=record_foo_seen) |
| 1497 | |
| 1498 | Of course, you could do that with the ``store_true`` action. |
| 1499 | |
| 1500 | |
| 1501 | .. _optparse-callback-example-2: |
| 1502 | |
| 1503 | Callback example 2: check option order |
| 1504 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1505 | |
| 1506 | Here's a slightly more interesting example: record the fact that ``"-a"`` is |
| 1507 | seen, but blow up if it comes after ``"-b"`` in the command-line. :: |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 | def check_order(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1510 | if parser.values.b: |
| 1511 | raise OptionValueError("can't use -a after -b") |
| 1512 | parser.values.a = 1 |
| 1513 | [...] |
| 1514 | parser.add_option("-a", action="callback", callback=check_order) |
| 1515 | parser.add_option("-b", action="store_true", dest="b") |
| 1516 | |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 | .. _optparse-callback-example-3: |
| 1519 | |
| 1520 | Callback example 3: check option order (generalized) |
| 1521 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1522 | |
| 1523 | If you want to re-use this callback for several similar options (set a flag, but |
| 1524 | blow up if ``"-b"`` has already been seen), it needs a bit of work: the error |
| 1525 | message and the flag that it sets must be generalized. :: |
| 1526 | |
| 1527 | def check_order(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1528 | if parser.values.b: |
| 1529 | raise OptionValueError("can't use %s after -b" % opt_str) |
| 1530 | setattr(parser.values, option.dest, 1) |
| 1531 | [...] |
| 1532 | parser.add_option("-a", action="callback", callback=check_order, dest='a') |
| 1533 | parser.add_option("-b", action="store_true", dest="b") |
| 1534 | parser.add_option("-c", action="callback", callback=check_order, dest='c') |
| 1535 | |
| 1536 | |
| 1537 | .. _optparse-callback-example-4: |
| 1538 | |
| 1539 | Callback example 4: check arbitrary condition |
| 1540 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1541 | |
| 1542 | Of course, you could put any condition in there---you're not limited to checking |
| 1543 | the values of already-defined options. For example, if you have options that |
| 1544 | should not be called when the moon is full, all you have to do is this:: |
| 1545 | |
| 1546 | def check_moon(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1547 | if is_moon_full(): |
| 1548 | raise OptionValueError("%s option invalid when moon is full" |
| 1549 | % opt_str) |
| 1550 | setattr(parser.values, option.dest, 1) |
| 1551 | [...] |
| 1552 | parser.add_option("--foo", |
| 1553 | action="callback", callback=check_moon, dest="foo") |
| 1554 | |
| 1555 | (The definition of ``is_moon_full()`` is left as an exercise for the reader.) |
| 1556 | |
| 1557 | |
| 1558 | .. _optparse-callback-example-5: |
| 1559 | |
| 1560 | Callback example 5: fixed arguments |
| 1561 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1562 | |
| 1563 | Things get slightly more interesting when you define callback options that take |
| 1564 | a fixed number of arguments. Specifying that a callback option takes arguments |
| 1565 | is similar to defining a ``store`` or ``append`` option: if you define |
| 1566 | :attr:`type`, then the option takes one argument that must be convertible to |
| 1567 | that type; if you further define ``nargs``, then the option takes ``nargs`` |
| 1568 | arguments. |
| 1569 | |
| 1570 | Here's an example that just emulates the standard ``store`` action:: |
| 1571 | |
| 1572 | def store_value(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1573 | setattr(parser.values, option.dest, value) |
| 1574 | [...] |
| 1575 | parser.add_option("--foo", |
| 1576 | action="callback", callback=store_value, |
| 1577 | type="int", nargs=3, dest="foo") |
| 1578 | |
| 1579 | Note that :mod:`optparse` takes care of consuming 3 arguments and converting |
| 1580 | them to integers for you; all you have to do is store them. (Or whatever; |
| 1581 | obviously you don't need a callback for this example.) |
| 1582 | |
| 1583 | |
| 1584 | .. _optparse-callback-example-6: |
| 1585 | |
| 1586 | Callback example 6: variable arguments |
| 1587 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1588 | |
| 1589 | Things get hairy when you want an option to take a variable number of arguments. |
| 1590 | For this case, you must write a callback, as :mod:`optparse` doesn't provide any |
| 1591 | built-in capabilities for it. And you have to deal with certain intricacies of |
| 1592 | conventional Unix command-line parsing that :mod:`optparse` normally handles for |
| 1593 | you. In particular, callbacks should implement the conventional rules for bare |
| 1594 | ``"--"`` and ``"-"`` arguments: |
| 1595 | |
| 1596 | * either ``"--"`` or ``"-"`` can be option arguments |
| 1597 | |
| 1598 | * bare ``"--"`` (if not the argument to some option): halt command-line |
| 1599 | processing and discard the ``"--"`` |
| 1600 | |
| 1601 | * bare ``"-"`` (if not the argument to some option): halt command-line |
| 1602 | processing but keep the ``"-"`` (append it to ``parser.largs``) |
| 1603 | |
| 1604 | If you want an option that takes a variable number of arguments, there are |
| 1605 | several subtle, tricky issues to worry about. The exact implementation you |
| 1606 | choose will be based on which trade-offs you're willing to make for your |
| 1607 | application (which is why :mod:`optparse` doesn't support this sort of thing |
| 1608 | directly). |
| 1609 | |
| 1610 | Nevertheless, here's a stab at a callback for an option with variable |
| 1611 | arguments:: |
| 1612 | |
| 1613 | def vararg_callback(option, opt_str, value, parser): |
| 1614 | assert value is None |
| 1615 | done = 0 |
| 1616 | value = [] |
| 1617 | rargs = parser.rargs |
| 1618 | while rargs: |
| 1619 | arg = rargs[0] |
| 1620 | |
| 1621 | # Stop if we hit an arg like "--foo", "-a", "-fx", "--file=f", |
| 1622 | # etc. Note that this also stops on "-3" or "-3.0", so if |
| 1623 | # your option takes numeric values, you will need to handle |
| 1624 | # this. |
| 1625 | if ((arg[:2] == "--" and len(arg) > 2) or |
| 1626 | (arg[:1] == "-" and len(arg) > 1 and arg[1] != "-")): |
| 1627 | break |
| 1628 | else: |
| 1629 | value.append(arg) |
| 1630 | del rargs[0] |
| 1631 | |
Christian Heimes | c3f30c4 | 2008-02-22 16:37:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1632 | setattr(parser.values, option.dest, value) |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1633 | |
| 1634 | [...] |
| 1635 | parser.add_option("-c", "--callback", |
Christian Heimes | 81ee3ef | 2008-05-04 22:42:01 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1636 | action="callback", callback=vararg_callback) |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1637 | |
| 1638 | The main weakness with this particular implementation is that negative numbers |
| 1639 | in the arguments following ``"-c"`` will be interpreted as further options |
| 1640 | (probably causing an error), rather than as arguments to ``"-c"``. Fixing this |
| 1641 | is left as an exercise for the reader. |
| 1642 | |
Georg Brandl | 116aa62 | 2007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1643 | |
| 1644 | .. _optparse-extending-optparse: |
| 1645 | |
| 1646 | Extending :mod:`optparse` |
| 1647 | ------------------------- |
| 1648 | |
| 1649 | Since the two major controlling factors in how :mod:`optparse` interprets |
| 1650 | command-line options are the action and type of each option, the most likely |
| 1651 | direction of extension is to add new actions and new types. |
| 1652 | |
| 1653 | |
| 1654 | .. _optparse-adding-new-types: |
| 1655 | |
| 1656 | Adding new types |
| 1657 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1658 | |
| 1659 | To add new types, you need to define your own subclass of :mod:`optparse`'s |
| 1660 | Option class. This class has a couple of attributes that define |
| 1661 | :mod:`optparse`'s types: :attr:`TYPES` and :attr:`TYPE_CHECKER`. |
| 1662 | |
| 1663 | :attr:`TYPES` is a tuple of type names; in your subclass, simply define a new |
| 1664 | tuple :attr:`TYPES` that builds on the standard one. |
| 1665 | |
| 1666 | :attr:`TYPE_CHECKER` is a dictionary mapping type names to type-checking |
| 1667 | functions. A type-checking function has the following signature:: |
| 1668 | |
| 1669 | def check_mytype(option, opt, value) |
| 1670 | |
| 1671 | where ``option`` is an :class:`Option` instance, ``opt`` is an option string |
| 1672 | (e.g., ``"-f"``), and ``value`` is the string from the command line that must be |
| 1673 | checked and converted to your desired type. ``check_mytype()`` should return an |
| 1674 | object of the hypothetical type ``mytype``. The value returned by a |
| 1675 | type-checking function will wind up in the OptionValues instance returned by |
| 1676 | :meth:`OptionParser.parse_args`, or be passed to a callback as the ``value`` |
| 1677 | parameter. |
| 1678 | |
| 1679 | Your type-checking function should raise OptionValueError if it encounters any |
| 1680 | problems. OptionValueError takes a single string argument, which is passed |
| 1681 | as-is to OptionParser's :meth:`error` method, which in turn prepends the program |
| 1682 | name and the string ``"error:"`` and prints everything to stderr before |
| 1683 | terminating the process. |
| 1684 | |
| 1685 | Here's a silly example that demonstrates adding a ``complex`` option type to |
| 1686 | parse Python-style complex numbers on the command line. (This is even sillier |
| 1687 | than it used to be, because :mod:`optparse` 1.3 added built-in support for |
| 1688 | complex numbers, but never mind.) |
| 1689 | |
| 1690 | First, the necessary imports:: |
| 1691 | |
| 1692 | from copy import copy |
| 1693 | from optparse import Option, OptionValueError |
| 1694 | |
| 1695 | You need to define your type-checker first, since it's referred to later (in the |
| 1696 | :attr:`TYPE_CHECKER` class attribute of your Option subclass):: |
| 1697 | |
| 1698 | def check_complex(option, opt, value): |
| 1699 | try: |
| 1700 | return complex(value) |
| 1701 | except ValueError: |
| 1702 | raise OptionValueError( |
| 1703 | "option %s: invalid complex value: %r" % (opt, value)) |
| 1704 | |
| 1705 | Finally, the Option subclass:: |
| 1706 | |
| 1707 | class MyOption (Option): |
| 1708 | TYPES = Option.TYPES + ("complex",) |
| 1709 | TYPE_CHECKER = copy(Option.TYPE_CHECKER) |
| 1710 | TYPE_CHECKER["complex"] = check_complex |
| 1711 | |
| 1712 | (If we didn't make a :func:`copy` of :attr:`Option.TYPE_CHECKER`, we would end |
| 1713 | up modifying the :attr:`TYPE_CHECKER` attribute of :mod:`optparse`'s Option |
| 1714 | class. This being Python, nothing stops you from doing that except good manners |
| 1715 | and common sense.) |
| 1716 | |
| 1717 | That's it! Now you can write a script that uses the new option type just like |
| 1718 | any other :mod:`optparse`\ -based script, except you have to instruct your |
| 1719 | OptionParser to use MyOption instead of Option:: |
| 1720 | |
| 1721 | parser = OptionParser(option_class=MyOption) |
| 1722 | parser.add_option("-c", type="complex") |
| 1723 | |
| 1724 | Alternately, you can build your own option list and pass it to OptionParser; if |
| 1725 | you don't use :meth:`add_option` in the above way, you don't need to tell |
| 1726 | OptionParser which option class to use:: |
| 1727 | |
| 1728 | option_list = [MyOption("-c", action="store", type="complex", dest="c")] |
| 1729 | parser = OptionParser(option_list=option_list) |
| 1730 | |
| 1731 | |
| 1732 | .. _optparse-adding-new-actions: |
| 1733 | |
| 1734 | Adding new actions |
| 1735 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1736 | |
| 1737 | Adding new actions is a bit trickier, because you have to understand that |
| 1738 | :mod:`optparse` has a couple of classifications for actions: |
| 1739 | |
| 1740 | "store" actions |
| 1741 | actions that result in :mod:`optparse` storing a value to an attribute of the |
| 1742 | current OptionValues instance; these options require a :attr:`dest` attribute to |
| 1743 | be supplied to the Option constructor |
| 1744 | |
| 1745 | "typed" actions |
| 1746 | actions that take a value from the command line and expect it to be of a certain |
| 1747 | type; or rather, a string that can be converted to a certain type. These |
| 1748 | options require a :attr:`type` attribute to the Option constructor. |
| 1749 | |
| 1750 | These are overlapping sets: some default "store" actions are ``store``, |
| 1751 | ``store_const``, ``append``, and ``count``, while the default "typed" actions |
| 1752 | are ``store``, ``append``, and ``callback``. |
| 1753 | |
| 1754 | When you add an action, you need to categorize it by listing it in at least one |
| 1755 | of the following class attributes of Option (all are lists of strings): |
| 1756 | |
| 1757 | :attr:`ACTIONS` |
| 1758 | all actions must be listed in ACTIONS |
| 1759 | |
| 1760 | :attr:`STORE_ACTIONS` |
| 1761 | "store" actions are additionally listed here |
| 1762 | |
| 1763 | :attr:`TYPED_ACTIONS` |
| 1764 | "typed" actions are additionally listed here |
| 1765 | |
| 1766 | ``ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS`` |
| 1767 | actions that always take a type (i.e. whose options always take a value) are |
| 1768 | additionally listed here. The only effect of this is that :mod:`optparse` |
| 1769 | assigns the default type, ``string``, to options with no explicit type whose |
| 1770 | action is listed in ``ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS``. |
| 1771 | |
| 1772 | In order to actually implement your new action, you must override Option's |
| 1773 | :meth:`take_action` method and add a case that recognizes your action. |
| 1774 | |
| 1775 | For example, let's add an ``extend`` action. This is similar to the standard |
| 1776 | ``append`` action, but instead of taking a single value from the command-line |
| 1777 | and appending it to an existing list, ``extend`` will take multiple values in a |
| 1778 | single comma-delimited string, and extend an existing list with them. That is, |
| 1779 | if ``"--names"`` is an ``extend`` option of type ``string``, the command line |
| 1780 | :: |
| 1781 | |
| 1782 | --names=foo,bar --names blah --names ding,dong |
| 1783 | |
| 1784 | would result in a list :: |
| 1785 | |
| 1786 | ["foo", "bar", "blah", "ding", "dong"] |
| 1787 | |
| 1788 | Again we define a subclass of Option:: |
| 1789 | |
| 1790 | class MyOption (Option): |
| 1791 | |
| 1792 | ACTIONS = Option.ACTIONS + ("extend",) |
| 1793 | STORE_ACTIONS = Option.STORE_ACTIONS + ("extend",) |
| 1794 | TYPED_ACTIONS = Option.TYPED_ACTIONS + ("extend",) |
| 1795 | ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS = Option.ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS + ("extend",) |
| 1796 | |
| 1797 | def take_action(self, action, dest, opt, value, values, parser): |
| 1798 | if action == "extend": |
| 1799 | lvalue = value.split(",") |
| 1800 | values.ensure_value(dest, []).extend(lvalue) |
| 1801 | else: |
| 1802 | Option.take_action( |
| 1803 | self, action, dest, opt, value, values, parser) |
| 1804 | |
| 1805 | Features of note: |
| 1806 | |
| 1807 | * ``extend`` both expects a value on the command-line and stores that value |
| 1808 | somewhere, so it goes in both :attr:`STORE_ACTIONS` and :attr:`TYPED_ACTIONS` |
| 1809 | |
| 1810 | * to ensure that :mod:`optparse` assigns the default type of ``string`` to |
| 1811 | ``extend`` actions, we put the ``extend`` action in ``ALWAYS_TYPED_ACTIONS`` as |
| 1812 | well |
| 1813 | |
| 1814 | * :meth:`MyOption.take_action` implements just this one new action, and passes |
| 1815 | control back to :meth:`Option.take_action` for the standard :mod:`optparse` |
| 1816 | actions |
| 1817 | |
| 1818 | * ``values`` is an instance of the optparse_parser.Values class, which |
| 1819 | provides the very useful :meth:`ensure_value` method. :meth:`ensure_value` is |
| 1820 | essentially :func:`getattr` with a safety valve; it is called as :: |
| 1821 | |
| 1822 | values.ensure_value(attr, value) |
| 1823 | |
| 1824 | If the ``attr`` attribute of ``values`` doesn't exist or is None, then |
| 1825 | ensure_value() first sets it to ``value``, and then returns 'value. This is very |
| 1826 | handy for actions like ``extend``, ``append``, and ``count``, all of which |
| 1827 | accumulate data in a variable and expect that variable to be of a certain type |
| 1828 | (a list for the first two, an integer for the latter). Using |
| 1829 | :meth:`ensure_value` means that scripts using your action don't have to worry |
| 1830 | about setting a default value for the option destinations in question; they can |
| 1831 | just leave the default as None and :meth:`ensure_value` will take care of |
| 1832 | getting it right when it's needed. |