Skip to main content

Feature-rich Python project template for config-cli-gui.

Project description

Welcome to config-cli-gui

Unified Configuration and Interface Management

Provides a generic configuration framework that automatically generates both command-line interfaces and GUI settings dialogs from configuration parameters.

Github CI Status GitHub release Read the Docs License GitHub issues PyPI Downloads

config-cli-gui is a Python library designed to streamline the management of application configurations, generating command-line interfaces (CLIs), and dynamically creating graphical user interface (GUI) settings dialogs from a single source of truth. It leverages Pydantic for robust parameter definition and offers powerful features for consistent configuration across different application entry points.


🚀 Installation

You can install config-cli-gui using pip:

pip install config-cli-gui

✨ Features

  • Single Source of Truth: Define all your application parameters in one place using simple, dataclass-like structures based on Pydantic's BaseModel. This ensures consistency and reduces errors across your application.
  • Categorized Configuration: Organize your parameters into logical categories (e.g., cli, app, gui) for better structure and maintainability.
  • Dynamic CLI Generation: Automatically generate argparse-compatible command-line arguments directly from your defined configuration parameters, including help texts, types, and choices.
  • Config File Management: Easily load and save configurations from/to YAML or JSON files, allowing users to customize default settings.
  • GUI Settings Dialogs: Dynamically create Tkinter-based settings dialogs for your application, allowing users to intuitively modify configuration parameters via a graphical interface.
  • Documentation Generation: Generate detailed Markdown documentation for both your CLI options and all configuration parameters, keeping your user guides always up-to-date with your codebase.
  • Override System: Supports robust overriding of configuration values via configuration files and command-line arguments, with clear precedence.

📚 Usage

1. Define Your Configuration

Start by defining your application's configuration parameters in a central config.py file within your project. You will inherit from config-cli-gui's GenericConfigManager and BaseConfigCategory.

# my_project/config.py
from config_cli_gui.config import ConfigParameter, GenericConfigManager, BaseConfigCategory
from pydantic import Field # Make sure pydantic is installed

class MyCliConfig(BaseConfigCategory):
    """CLI-specific parameters for MyProject."""
    input_path: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="input_path",
        default="",
        type_=str,
        help="Path to the input file or directory",
        required=True,
        cli_arg=None # Positional argument
    )
    output_dir: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="output_dir",
        default="./output",
        type_=str,
        help="Directory for output files",
        cli_arg="--output"
    )
    dry_run: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="dry_run",
        default=False,
        type_=bool,
        help="Perform a dry run without making actual changes",
        cli_arg="--dry-run"
    )

class MyAppConfig(BaseConfigCategory):
    """Application-wide settings."""
    log_level: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="log_level",
        default="INFO",
        type_=str,
        choices=["DEBUG", "INFO", "WARNING", "ERROR"],
        help="Logging verbosity level"
    )
    max_threads: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="max_threads",
        default=4,
        type_=int,
        help="Maximum number of processing threads"
    )

class MyGuiConfig(BaseConfigCategory):
    """GUI-specific settings."""
    theme: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="theme",
        default="dark",
        type_=str,
        choices=["light", "dark", "system"],
        help="GUI theme"
    )
    window_size: ConfigParameter = ConfigParameter(
        name="window_size",
        default="800x600",
        type_=str,
        help="Initial GUI window size"
    )

class ProjectConfigManager(GenericConfigManager):
    """Main configuration manager for MyProject."""
    cli: MyCliConfig = Field(default_factory=MyCliConfig)
    app: MyAppConfig = Field(default_factory=MyAppConfig)
    gui: MyGuiConfig = Field(default_factory=MyGuiConfig)

    def __init__(self, config_file: str | None = None, **kwargs):
        # Dynamically register categories for the generic manager
        self.__class__.add_config_category("cli", MyCliConfig)
        self.__class__.add_config_category("app", MyAppConfig)
        self.__class__.add_config_category("gui", MyGuiConfig)
        super().__init__(config_file, **kwargs)

2. Generate CLI

Use the generic CLI functions to parse command-line arguments based on your defined CliConfig.

# my_project/cli.py
import argparse
from my_project.config import ProjectConfigManager
from config_cli_gui.cli import create_argument_parser, create_config_overrides_from_args

def parse_my_args():
    # Define any project-specific hardcoded CLI args (e.g., --version)
    extra_cli_args = {
        "--version": {"action": "version", "version": "MyProject 1.0.0", "help": "Show program's version number and exit."}
    }

    parser = create_argument_parser(
        config_manager_class=ProjectConfigManager,
        description="MyProject CLI application",
        epilog="""
Examples:
  python -m my_project.cli my_input.txt --output ./results
  python -m my_project.cli --config custom.yaml another_input.csv
        """,
        cli_category_name="cli", # The name of your CLI config category
        extra_arguments=extra_cli_args
    )
    return parser.parse_args()

def main_cli():
    args = parse_my_args()

    # Map generic flags like verbose/quiet to specific log levels if desired
    log_level_map = {
        "verbose": "DEBUG", # Assuming you added a --verbose flag in extra_cli_args
        "quiet": "WARNING"  # Assuming you added a --quiet flag
    }

    cli_overrides = create_config_overrides_from_args(
        args,
        config_manager_class=ProjectConfigManager,
        cli_category_name="cli",
        log_level_map=log_level_map
    )

    # Initialize your project's configuration
    config = ProjectConfigManager(
        config_file=args.config if hasattr(args, "config") and args.config else None,
        **cli_overrides
    )

    print(f"Input Path: {config.cli.input_path.default}")
    print(f"Output Directory: {config.cli.output_dir.default}")
    print(f"Dry Run: {config.cli.dry_run.default}")
    print(f"Log Level: {config.app.log_level.default}")
    # ... your application logic using 'config'

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main_cli()

3. Integrate GUI Settings Dialog

The SettingsDialog from config-cli-gui (or your project's adapted version) can be used to easily create a settings window.

# my_project/gui.py (Simplified example)
import tkinter as tk
from my_project.config import ProjectConfigManager
from config_cli_gui.gui_settings import SettingsDialog # Assuming gui_settings is part of the generic lib or adapted

def open_settings_window(parent_root, config_manager: ProjectConfigManager):
    dialog = SettingsDialog(parent_root, config_manager)
    parent_root.wait_window(dialog.dialog)
    # After dialog closes, config_manager will have updated values if 'OK' was clicked
    print("Settings updated or cancelled.")
    print(f"New GUI Theme: {config_manager.gui.theme.default}")

if __name__ == "__main__":
    root = tk.Tk()
    root.withdraw() # Hide main window for this example
    
    # Initialize your project's config manager
    project_config = ProjectConfigManager() 
    
    open_settings_window(root, project_config)
    
    root.destroy()

4. Generate Documentation and Default Config

Use the static methods on your ProjectConfigManager to generate config.yaml, cli.md, and config.md files.

# scripts/generate_docs.py (or similar script in your project)
from my_project.config import ProjectConfigManager
import os

# Define output paths
output_dir = "docs/generated"
os.makedirs(output_dir, exist_ok=True)

config_file_path = "config.yaml" # At the project root or similar
cli_doc_path = os.path.join(output_dir, "cli.md")
config_doc_path = os.path.join(output_dir, "config.md")

print(f"Generating default config to: {config_file_path}")
ProjectConfigManager.generate_default_config_file(config_file_path)

print(f"Generating general config documentation to: {config_doc_path}")
ProjectConfigManager.generate_config_markdown_doc(config_doc_path)

print(f"Generating CLI documentation to: {cli_doc_path}")
ProjectConfigManager.generate_cli_markdown_doc(
    output_file=cli_doc_path,
    cli_category_name="cli", # Ensure this matches your CLI config category
    cli_entry_point="python -m my_project.cli" # Your project's actual CLI entry point
)

print("Documentation and default config generation complete.")

By following this structure, config-cli-gui provides a robust and maintainable foundation for your application's configuration needs.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

config_cli_gui-0.1.1.tar.gz (184.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

config_cli_gui-0.1.1-py3-none-any.whl (18.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file config_cli_gui-0.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: config_cli_gui-0.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 184.7 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.11.13

File hashes

Hashes for config_cli_gui-0.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a2439b61a9eeff6f00fe3d0c6d7aee3d5d560e953a0170313478b9a2d58ec95c
MD5 49b15470e7428a911d4bdd9b4da9c346
BLAKE2b-256 101cb59fd1cf9b2b34647710d5ea029aef36a9466d6cb2b1a5edb7abd000a772

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file config_cli_gui-0.1.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: config_cli_gui-0.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 18.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.11.13

File hashes

Hashes for config_cli_gui-0.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c818df0a2f9880fd7c51921f557d931a2dab1732870502bad64a9d9414fff1ed
MD5 3dfdfccf4cab3eda1f592c79af97ee69
BLAKE2b-256 0a538766db303125e1e3a4c9977facc8090540a924ca3054de841de0145682d8

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page