argparse_utils
provides a collection of utilities for the Python standard-library
argparse
module.
These utilities assist with parsing command-line arguments to Python objects.
Consider a simple command-line script which accepts a colour as it's only argument, and immediately prints the Python representation of that object.
from argparse import ArgumentParser
from enum import Enum
from argparse_utils import enum_action
class Colours(Enum):
red = 1
green = 2
blue = 3
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('colour', action=enum_action(Colours))
arguments = parser.parse_args()
print(repr(arguments.colour))
$ argparse_utils_example.py red
<Colours.red: 1>
Without the enum_action
action, arguments.colour
would be the string 'red'
,
rather than the enum value Colours.red
.
What's more, the action ensures that only the values given in the enum are allowed,
instead of any string value.
-
datetime_action(fmt='%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S')
Maps command-line arguments in the given format to
datetime
objects. Only accepts valid date-times in that format.eg. An action of
datetime_action()
would map a command-line argument of2000-01-01T00:00:00
to the Python objectdatetime.datetime(2000, 1, 1, 0, 0)
. -
date_action(fmt='%Y-%m-%d')
Maps command-line arguments in the given format to
date
objects. Only accepts valid dates in that format.eg. An action of
date_action()
would map a command-line argument of2000-01-01
to the Python objectdatetime.date(2000, 1, 1)
. -
time_action(fmt='%H:%M:%S')
Maps command-line arguments in the given format to
time
objects. Only accepts valid times in that format.eg. An action of
time_action()
would map a command-line argument of00:00:00
to the Python objectdatetime.time(0, 0)
. -
timedelta_action(fmt='%H:%M:%S')
Maps command-line arguments in the given format to
timedelta
objects. Only accepts valid time-deltas in that format.Note: As this uses a
timedelta
object, this may behave in unexpected ways when attempting to use months or years.eg. An action of
timedelta_action()
would map a command-line argument of01:00:00
to the Python objectdatetime.timedelta(0, 3600))
. -
json_action(**kwargs)
Maps command-line arguments to JSON objects. Only accepts valid JSON. Passes
kwargs
on tojson.loads
.eg. An action of
json_action()
would map a command-line argument of{"a": 1, "b": 2}
to the Python object{"a": 1, "b": 2}
. -
mapping_action(possible_values, key_normalizer=None)
Takes a dictionary whose keys are the allowed values, and maps those values to the values found in the dictionary. Only the values found as keys in the dictionary are allowed as command-line arguments.
key_normalizer
, if given, allows variants of the keys, by normalizing them before looking them up in the given mapping.eg. An action of
mapping_action({ 'red': (255, 0, 0), 'green': (0, 255, 0), 'blue': (0, 0, 255) }, str.lower)
would map a command-line argument of
red
to the Python object(255, 0, 0)
.Using
str.lower
as thekey_normalizer
makes the command-line argument case-insensitive. -
enum_action(enum_class, key_normalizer=None)
Takes an
Enum
class, and maps the string representation of the keys to the appropriate enum value. Only the values found in the enum are allowed as command-line arguments.key_normalizer
, if given, allows variants of the keys, by normalizing them before looking them up in the given mapping.eg. Using the
Colour
enum, from the first example, an action ofenum_action(Colour, str.lower)
would map a command-line argument of
red
to the enumColour.red
value.Using
str.lower
as thekey_normalizer
makes the command-line argument case-insensitive. -
python_literal_action()
Maps command-line arguments to Python literals. Only accepts valid Python literal objects.
Similar to
json_action
, but also allows tuples, and complex numbers.eg. An action of
python_literal_action()
would map a command-line argument of(1, 2)
to the Python object(1, 2)
.
Install and update using the standard Python package manager pip:
pip install argparse-utils