An easy and Pythonic way to create your POSIX command line
version 0.4.4:
change auto balance function, fix the issue that won't work for this case
"""
Usage:
cp [options] <source>... <target>
Options:
-R
"""
How do you define your command line interface?
Write a parse by yourself or spend hours learning optparse
/ argparse
,
and modify both code side and document every time you update the interface?
Life is short, man! You can simply do it this way:
"""
My copy script
Usage:
cp.py [options] <source_file> <target_file>
cp.py [options] <source_file>... <target_directory>
Options:
-h -? --help print this screen
--version print the version of this script
-v --verbose print more information while running
"""
from docpie import docpie
args = docpie(__doc__)
print(args)
Now run it
$ python cp.py a.txt b.txt c.txt /tmp
{'--': False,
'--help': False,
'--verbose': False,
'--version': False,
'-?': False,
'-h': False,
'-v': False,
'<source_file>': ['a.txt', 'b.txt', 'c.txt'],
'<target_directory>': '/tmp',
'<target_file>': None}
Write a __doc__
, pass it to a function, DONE! Isn't it simple?
Install release version:
pip install docpie
Install nightly/dev version:
pip install git+https://github.com/TylerTemp/docpie.git@dev
docpie
has been tested with Python:
- 2.6, 2.7, pypy-2.0, pypy-2.6
- 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, pypy3-2.4
You can run test suit by python setup.py test
Interested? Visit Wiki and get start!
Or you can try it in your browser
docpie
can greatly reduce the work you need to be done for
command-line interface. What you see is what you get.
Every time you only need to update your document, and keep the
code unchanged.
See here for more reasons.
Many examples & tests are from docopt
.
docpie
is released under
MIT-License
If you like this project, you can buy me a beer so I can make it better!