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Strongly typed tool configuration classes for argument parsing.

Project description

Config Classes (cfgclasses)

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Meta code style - Black types - Mypy linting - pylint License - MIT

Strongly typed tool configuration classes for argument parsing.

ConfigClasses are representations of a python tools CLI configuration options built on dataclasses. This allows individual tools to focus on specifying their configuration structure without the overhead of interacting with argparse and the typeless Namespace it returns.

See the documnentation for full user guides and API references.

Installation

pip install cfgclasses

Features

  • Simple class definitions using dataclasses
  • Nested config and tool submodes reduce code repetition
  • Mutually exclusive groups support
  • Validation functions for reliable verification of config
  • Argument transformations reducing repetition of common patterns (e.g. reading contents of a file)

Example Usage

The following shows a simple script setup using a Config Class.

import dataclasses
import sys
from cfgclasses import ConfigClass, arg, optional
from pathlib import Path
from typing import Optional

@dataclasses.dataclass
class Config(ConfigClass):
    # Simple options are required on the CLI
    intopt: int = arg("A simple integer field")
    inpath: Path = arg("A required Path field")

    # Optional fields default to None when not specified
    outpath: Optional[Path] = optional("An optional Path field")

    # Can specify custom default or default_factory values
    stropt: str = arg("A string field with a default", default="X")

    # The authors preference is to put run modes on the config classes.
    # This is entirely optional, and main() methods that take in the Config
    # object as their only arg is a perfectly sensible alternative.
    def run(self) -> None:
        """Main entry point of this script."""
        ...

if __name__ == '__main__':
    config = Config.parse_args(sys.argv[1:], prog="example")
    config.run()

The -h output from this script is:

usage: example [-h] --intopt INTOPT --inpath INPATH [--outpath OUTPATH] [--stropt STROPT]

options:
  -h, --help         show this help message and exit

  --intopt INTOPT    A simple integer field
  --inpath INPATH    A required Path field
  --outpath OUTPATH  An optional Path field
  --stropt STROPT    A string field with a default

This same script implemented in argparse would look like this:

import argparse
import sys
from pathlib import Path

def _parse_args(argv: list[str]):
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(prog="example")
    # In argparse options default to None unless you specified they're required.
    # Help messages are optional in argparse, but required in cfgclasses.
    parser.add_argument("--intopt", type=int, help="A simple integer field", required=True)
    parser.add_arugment("--inpath", type=Path, help="A required Path field", required=True)

    # Optional fields are the default in argparse, so type is actually Optional[Path]
    parser.add_argument("--outpath", type=Path, help="An optional Path field")

    # Defaults work the same, but there's no default_factory in argparse
    parser.add_argument("--stropt", default=X", help="A string field with a default")

def main(args: argparse.Namespace) -> None:
    """Main entry point of this script."""
    # Note: args here is relatively typeless - if one of the argument types is
    # changed (e.g. from str to Path) mypy will not pick up on this error.
    ...

if __name__ == '__main__':
    args = _parse_args(sys.argv[1:])
    main(args)

For further examples see the examples subdirectory.

License

CFG-Classes is distributed under the terms of the MIT license.

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