Modern, declarative argument parser for Python 3.6+
Project description
Modern, declarative argument parser for Python 3.6+. Powerful like click, integrated like argparse, declarative as sqlalchemy. MIT licenced.
pip3 install declarative_parser
As simple as argparse
It’s built on top of argparse - everything you already know stays valid!
from declarative_parser import Parser, Argument class MyParser(Parser): square = Argument(help='display a square of a given number') parser = MyParser() args = parser.parse_args() print(args.square**2)
Nested and Parellel
Everyone knows about nested args. What about parallel groups?
supported_formats = ['png', 'jpeg', 'gif'] class InputOptions(Parser): path = Argument(type=argparse.FileType('rb'), optional=False) format = Argument(default='png', choices=supported_formats) class OutputOptions(Parser): format = Argument(default='jpeg', choices=supported_formats) scale = Argument(type=int, default=100, help='Rescale image to % of original size') class ImageConverter(Parser): description = 'This app converts images' verbose = Argument(action='store_true') input = InputOptions() output = OutputOptions() parser = ImageConverter() commands = '--verbose input image.png output --format gif --scale 50'.split() namespace = parser.parse_args(commands) assert namespace.input.format == 'png' assert namespace.output.format == 'gif'
Inteligent
Make use of Python 3 type hints to reduce tedious task of parsers writing to two or three lines. Positional, keyword arguments, type hints, docstrings - everything can be meaningfully transformed into a parser. And if you decide to take control, just overwrite the automatically deduced arguments with an Argument() defined as a class variable.
import argparse from declarative_parser import Argument from declarative_parser.constructor_parser import ConstructorParser class MyProgram: database = Argument( type=argparse.FileType('r'), help='Path to file with the database' ) def __init__(self, text: str, threshold: float=0.05, database=None): """My program does XYZ. Arguments: threshold: a floating-point value defining threshold, default 0.05 database: file object to the database if any """ print(text, threshold, None) parser = ConstructorParser(MyProgram) options = parser.parse_args() program = parser.constructor(**vars(options))
And it works quite intuitively:
$ ./my_program.py test --threshold 0.6 test 0.6 None $ ./my_program.py test --threshold f usage: my_program.py [-h] [--database DATABASE] [--threshold THRESHOLD] text {} ... my_program.py: error: argument --threshold: invalid float value: 'f' $ ./my_program.py --threshold 0.6 usage: my_program.py [-h] [--database DATABASE] [--threshold THRESHOLD] text {} ... my_program.py: error: the following arguments are required: text
Practical
What if you only want to show licence of your program? or version? Is there a need to write a separate logic? DeclarativeParser gives you utility decorator: @action which utilizes the power of argparse.Action, leaving behind the otherwise necessary boilerplate code.
__version__ = 2.0 import argparse from declarative_parser import action from declarative_parser.constructor_parser import ConstructorParser class MyProgram: def __init__(self, threshold: float=0.05): """My program does XYZ. Arguments: threshold: a floating-point value, default 0.05 """ pass @action def version(options): print(__version__) parser = ConstructorParser(MyProgram) options = parser.parse_args() program = parser.constructor(**vars(options))
The execution of an action will (by default) cause the program to exit immediately when finished.
See following run as example:
$ ./my_program.py --version
2.0
See more examples in the documentation.
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