61 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
61 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
# pargs
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Parse command line arguments into a list of args and a dict of kwargs.
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# Installation
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`pip install pargs`
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# Usage
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By default, `pargs.parse_args()` uses `sys.argv` as command line arguments.
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It can be used in the following way.
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```python
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from pargs import parse_args
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args, kwargs = parse_args()
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```
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The arguments to be parsed can also be specified manually:
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```python
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from pargs import parse_args
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args, kwargs = parse_args(argv=['pargs.py', '--name=Pargs'])
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```
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# Specification
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`parse_args` parses arguments in the following way:
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Assume the following command line arguments (`sys.argv`):
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```python
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['/pargs/pargs.py', 'command', 'positional', '--flag', '--optional=value', 'test', '--output-file', 'filename', '-flg', 'name', 'name2']
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```
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By calling `args, kwargs = parse_args()`, this would return the following list and dict:
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```python
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args = ['/pargs/pargs.py', 'command', 'positional'],
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kwargs = {
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'flag': True,
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'optional': ['value', 'test'],
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'output_file': ['filename'],
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'f': True,
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'l': True,
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'g': ['name', 'name2'],
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}
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```
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## Basic behaviour
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- All arguments before the first option (starting with a hyphen) are considered positional arguments (`args`)
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- All other arguments are considered optional keyword arguments (`kwargs`)
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- Optional arguments without leading hyphens are considered as values to preceding keyword arguments and saved as list
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- Flags are recorded with the value `True` in the dict
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- The leading up to two hyphens are stripped from options, all other hyphens are converted into underscores (`---test-this-` would become `_test_this_`)
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