Skip to main content

A Python package for parsing configuration from various sources such as files, environment variables, and command-line arguments.

Project description

fejao-config-parser

This is a package for setting up the variables that you need to you on your project from a list of dictionaries.

I was tired of everytime that I needed to set a project that should have input/variables to be set from a configuration file, environment variables or from terminal to write this code again and again. Then the unit-test , lint, pep. And so on and on...

I hope that you also find this tiredsome work not needed anymore for using this package.

  • To Do

    This package at the moment it's not finished yet, just trying to publish on pypi.org at the moment

    • [] Finish README_PACKAGE.md file (The one to be publish on pypi.org)
    • [] Add lint tests
    • [] Add pep tests
    • [] Add the uni-test to pypi
    • [] Document the code (for generating the mkdocs)
    • [] Add the package code to git
    • [] Add CI-CD for testing + building + publishing
    • [] Something else that for sure I forgot to put on this list
  • Installing

    For using this package you need to install it with:

    pip install fejao-config-parser
    

    You can import it to your code with:

    from fejao_config_parser import my_config
    
  • Configuration

    • Structure

      You need to set a list of dictionaries such as:

      example_vaviables = [
        {
          <VARIABLE_1_CONFIGURATION>
        },
        {
          <VARIABLE_2_CONFIGURATION>
        },
        ...
        ...
        ...
        {
          <VARIABLE_N_CONFIGURATION>
        }
      ]
      
    • Dictionary entry for a variable

      Dictionary keys for setting a variable are:

      • name
        • The name of the variable that will be accessed at your project
        • This key is required to be set.
      • type
        • The type of this variable to be set, it will type-cast it as the type set here.
        • This key is required to be set.
        • Possible type of variables:
          • string
          • bool
          • int
          • float
          • list
          • dict
      • default
        • The default value of the variable to be set if any other methods were parsed.
        • This key is required to be set.
      • env_name
        • The name of the environment variable that should be read.
        • This key is NOT required to be set.
      • terminal_help
        • The name of the environment variable that should be read.
        • This key is NOT required to be set.
      • terminal_name
        • The variable name to be read from terminal. Example: example_string, it can be parsed at the terminal like --example_string <VAR_VALUE>
        • This key is NOT required to be set.
      • terminal_name_short
        • The variable short name to be read from terminal. Example: es, it can be parsed at the terminal like -es <VAR_VALUE>
        • This key is NOT required to be set.
    • Example

      example_variables = [
          {
            "name": "example_string",
            "type": "string",
            "default": "default_string_value",
            "env_name": "EXAMPLE_STRING",
            "terminal_help": "Example of a string terminal variable.",
            "terminal_name": "example_string",
            "terminal_name_short": "es",
          },
          {
            "name": "example_bool",
            "type": "bool",
            "default": False,
            "terminal_help": "Example of a boolean terminal variable.",
            "terminal_name": "example_bool",
            "terminal_name_short": "eb",
          },
          {
            "name": "example_int",
            "type": "int",
            "default": 42,
            "env_name": "EXAMPLE_INT",
          },
          {
            "name": "example_float",
            "type": "float",
            "default": 4.2,
          },
          {
            "name": "example_list",
            "type": "list",
            "default": ["1", "2", "3"],
            "env_name": "EXAMPLE_LIST",
            "terminal_help": "Example of a list terminal variable.",
            "terminal_name": "example_list",
            "terminal_name_short": "el",
          },
          {
            "name": "example_dictionary",
            "type": "dict",
            "default": {"key1": "value1", "key2": "value2"},
            "env_name": "EXAMPLE_DICTIONARY",
            "terminal_help": "Example of a dictionary terminal variable.",
            "terminal_name": "example_dictionary",
            "terminal_name_short": "ed",
          },
      ]
      
  • How to use it

    For calling the my_config function the possible keys are:

    • config

      • The list of dictionaries to be set as variables.
      • This key is required to be set.
    • config_file

      • The path of the configuration file to be used for reading the variables values.
      • This key is NOT required to be set.
      • Type of files that can be parsed:
        • yaml
        • json
        • toml
        • ini
          • Values should be set at the [default] section
          • Still don't know how till this date people keep using ini files.
    • description

      • Description of you project when running on terminal with the '--help' output.
      • This key is NOT required to be set.
    • debug

      • Boolean of setting up the output in terminal from the variables that were set using the package.
      • This key is NOT required to be set.
    • Example

      config = my_config(
        config=example_variables,
        config_file="/tmp/foo.yaml",
        description="My project is AMAZING and not done with vibe-coding",
        debug=True
      )
      
    • Accessing the variables

      For accessing the variables is easy as:

      from fejao_config_parser import my_config
      
      example_variables = [
          {
            "name": "example_string",
            "type": "string",
            "default": "default_string_value",
            "env_name": "EXAMPLE_STRING",
          }
      ]
      config = my_config(config=example_variables)
      
      print(f"example_string: {config.example_string}")
      ---> default_string_value
      
  • Links

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

fejao_config_parser-0.0.6.tar.gz (10.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

fejao_config_parser-0.0.6-py3-none-any.whl (11.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file fejao_config_parser-0.0.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: fejao_config_parser-0.0.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 10.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.10.12

File hashes

Hashes for fejao_config_parser-0.0.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9e200202cba8a58dc6b5de146e490cfbf605a1cfea1c6f014b1ffaaca238c1a3
MD5 077c1686389bc1596dca9f8b5833ba02
BLAKE2b-256 6f9e5411065b020a406b690300d91836db1adae5f8cde1474618a7bed6dbc129

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file fejao_config_parser-0.0.6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for fejao_config_parser-0.0.6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 577e372a85cc2639fb17f85f29344a7786e1fa13b560fac7695049ff9b00f509
MD5 5be23e767154fbc7fc3d6b695317d3db
BLAKE2b-256 b952e1bbf3cd334c583856a8fc68bf7d3ef6a959166eb131197e7ef11e46eb80

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