Skip to main content

A minimal library to make your option-parsing easier.

Project description

Lethargy - Option parsing, for simple apps

Released version Python versions MIT License Size

Lethargy takes care of option parsing in your scripts, so you can be more productive when writing the important stuff. It's simple, concise, explicit, and Pythonic.

Unlike Click and Argparse, Lethargy is succinct, can be implemented without changing the structure of a program, and requires no boilerplate code. This makes it especially suited to scripting and prototyping.

By design, it is not a full argument parser. If you're building a complete CLI application, you're probably better off using Click.

Installation

Lethargy only depends on the standard library. You can use pip to install lethargy.

pip install lethargy

Usage

from lethargy import Opt, argv

# --use-headers
headers = Opt("use headers").take_flag(argv)

# -f|--file <value>
output_file = Opt("f", "file").takes(1).take_args(argv)

Lethargy returns values appropriate to the option, safely mutating the list.

Getting Started

The default argv

To save you an additional import, lethargy provides lethargy.argv - a clone of the original argument list. Mutating it will not affect sys.argv.

Options

Options will automatically convert their names to the appropriate format (-o or --option). Casing will be preserved.

>>> from lethargy import Opt
>>> args = ["-", "--debug", "file.txt"]
>>> Opt("debug").take_flag(args)
True
>>> args
['-', 'file.txt']

To take arguments, use the Opt.takes method.

>>> args = ["-", "--height", "185cm", "people.csv"]
>>> Opt("height").takes(1).take_args(args)
'185cm'
>>> args
['-', 'people.csv']

Taking 1 argument will return a single value. Taking multiple will return a list (see the Argument unpacking section for details).

You can also use a "greedy" value, to take every remaining argument. The canonical way to do this is using the Ellipsis literal (...).

>>> args = ["--exclude", ".zshrc", ".bashrc"]
>>> Opt("exclude").takes(...).take_args(args)
['.zshrc', '.bashrc']

Argument unpacking

lethargy.Opt makes sure it's safe to unpack a returned list of values, unless you override the default parameter.

>>> Opt("x").takes(2).take_args(["-x", "1", "2"])
['1', '2']
>>> Opt("y").takes(2).take_args([])
[None, None]

If there are fewer arguments than expected, lethargy.ArgsError will be raised and no mutation will occur. Lethargy has clear and readable error messages.

>>> args = ["-z", "bad"]
>>> Opt("z").takes(2).take_args(args)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
lethargy.ArgsError: expected 2 arguments for '-z <value> <value>', found 1 ('bad')
>>> args
['-z', 'bad']

--debug and -v/--verbose

As these are such common options, lethargy includes functions out of the box to take these options.

>>> import lethargy
>>> args = ["-", "--debug", "--verbose", "sheet.csv"]
>>> lethargy.take_verbose(args)  # -v or --verbose
True
>>> lethargy.take_debug(args)
True
>>> args
['-', 'sheet.csv']

By convention, passing --verbose will cause a program to output more information. To make implementing this behaviour easier, lethargy has the print_if function, which will return print if its input is true and a dummy function if not.

from lethargy import take_verbose, print_if, argv

debug_print = print_if(take_verbose(argv))

debug_print("This will only print if `--debug` was passed to the script!")

Using str and repr

Opt instances provide a logical and consistent string form.

>>> str(Opt("flag"))
'--flag'
>>> str(Opt("e", "example").takes(1))
'-e|--example <value>'
>>> str(Opt("xyz").takes(...))
'--xyz [value]...'

The repr form makes debugging easy. Note that the order of the names is not guaranteed.

>>> Opt("f", "flag")
<Opt('flag', 'f').takes(0)>

Raising instead of defaulting

If Opt.take_args is called with raises=True, lethargy.MissingOption will be raised instead of returning a default, even if the default is set explicitly.

This behaviour makes it easy to implement mandatory options.

from lethargy import Opt, argv, MissingOption

opt = Opt('example').takes(1)

try:
    value = opt.take_args(argv, raises=True)
except MissingOption:
    print(f'Missing required option: {opt}')
    exit(1)

Value conversion

Opt.takes can optionally take a callable object which will be used to convert the result of Opt.take_args. No additional error handling is performed, and the default value will not be converted.

>>> Opt('n').takes(1, int).take_args(['-n', '28980'])
28980
>>> Opt('f').takes(2, float).take_args(['-f', '1', '3.1415'])
[1.0, 3.1415]
>>> Opt('chars').takes(1, set).take_args([])
None
>>> Opt('chars').takes(1, set).take_args([], default='Default')
'Default'

Contributing

Any contributions and feedback are welcome! I'd appreciate it if you could open an issue to discuss changes before submitting a PR, but it's not enforced.

License

Lethargy is released under the MIT license.

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

lethargy-0.4.0.tar.gz (8.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

lethargy-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl (8.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file lethargy-0.4.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: lethargy-0.4.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.17 CPython/3.7.4 Darwin/19.0.0

File hashes

Hashes for lethargy-0.4.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 20c68341b7109e2ee4011d51e05722c7bf3e372547fb2753ce8dbdbcb861f860
MD5 094803071af3381fdda45abbf7354c5d
BLAKE2b-256 ddd7228cafc434025a9697c32239aaf2b99e779774af4c360222381618200022

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file lethargy-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: lethargy-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.17 CPython/3.7.4 Darwin/19.0.0

File hashes

Hashes for lethargy-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 da6f88478879fe8662313c8db110e3c1628a81b8082e819b6245a54e8da52469
MD5 4976114784b1439d8eeb4bf53179f754
BLAKE2b-256 163687d55d5ac4d46e8c3820097b4cd45c1285fc50ae015061bef31908adaada

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

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