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A module for systematically organizing user preferences acquired from a database, env vars, a parameter file, or user choices.

Project description

PropArgs

A module for systematically organizing user preferences acquired from a data store, env vars, a parameter file, the command line and/or user choices.

How it Works

Overview

PropArgs is initialized by sequentially loading the following five stages of input:

  1. Data Store
  2. Property Dictionary
  3. Environment
  4. Command Line
  5. User

The above is the default ordering. The user may change that order.

Properties may be added in any stage except User. A property defined in one stage may be overwritten in later stages.

Each property has a key and a value and is accessed like a dictionary:

>>> pa = PropArgs.create_props()
>>> pa["prop_nm"] = 1  # assigns the value 1 to the property "prop_nm"
>>> pa["prop_name"]
1

In addition to this, each property may have associated metadata. These are at present: a question for the user-input prompt, a datatype, an upper bound, and a lower bound. If at any point in the loading process the metadata rules are broken (e.g. the val exceeds the upper bound) an error will be raised.

The system has some similarities to the traitlets configuration module developed for iPython and Jupyter, but is more flexible, seeks configuration info from more sources, and is not tied to Python classes. (The property structure itself keeps the config info, but those values may be loaded into clases or not as per the needs of the application.)

Details

Data Store

The Data Store will be either a JSON file or a database.

The Data Store file will be specified on initialization

PropArgs.create_props(ds_file=file_name)

The JSON formatting is as follows:

{
    "prop_name_1": {
        "val": 1,
        "question": "What value should this property have?",
        "atype": "INT",
        "hival": 10,
        "lowval": 0
    },
    "prop_name_2": {
        "val": "Hello World."
    },
    "prop_name_3": {
    }
}

Note that a property need not have all (or any) fields defined. If no "val" is specified, a default "val" is assigned according to its atype:

  • "BOOL" defaults to False
  • "INT" defaults to 0
  • "FLT" defaults to 0.0
  • "CMPLX" defaults to 0j
  • "STR" defaults to ""
  • If no type is given, the value defaults to None.

Details on database data stores to come ...

Property Dictionary

Properties may be loaded by passing a dictionary at initialization:

>>> pa = PropArgs.create_props(prop_dict=prop_dict)

the dictionary formatted as follows:

{
    "prop_name_1": {
        "val": 1,
        "question": "What value should this property have?",
        "atype": "INT",
        "hival": 10,
        "lowval": 0
    },
    "prop_name_2": {
        "val": "Hello World."
    }
}

Environment

PropArgs will read and add all the environment variables of the program in which PropArgs is initialized. (i.e. everything in python's os.environ)

Command Line

Properties will be read from the command line as follows

$ python program_reading_props.py --props prop_1=val_1,prop_2=val_2,prop_3=val_3  #etc...

User

The final stage is to ask the user for input. The user will only be prompted about properties that have a question.

The default behavior is to prompt questions on the client's command line:

>>> pa = PropArgs.create_props()
What is the value of prop_1? ("I'm the default prop value") <enter_value>
What is the value of prop_2? [0.0-100.0] (20) <enter_value>

However, the client program may take over and ask questions in its own way. In this case we will provide a flag that skips the user stage, and instead the client will call pa.get_questions() for a JSON of the properties with questions.

>>> pa = PropArgs(skip_user_questions=True)
>>> pa.get_questions()
{
    "prop_name_1": {
        "val": 2.0,
        "question": "",
        "atype": "DBL",
        "hival": 10.0,
        "lowval": -0.5
    },
    "prop_name_2": {
        "val": "default",
        "question": "What should prop_name_2 be?"
    }
}

Other Ways Props May Be Added Or Modified

Outside of accessing a PropArgs object like a dictionary, values may be gotten through the get(key, default=None) method. Or if the key has not already been associated with a property, a new property will be bound to default (or None if a default isn't specified).

>>> pa = PropArgs.create_props()
>>> pa.get('new_prop', default=2)
2
>>> pa.get('newer_prop')
None

Credits

Idea - Robert Dodson

Development - Gene Callahan and Nathan Conroy

Project details


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