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PyCommands is a module intended for quick and high-level scripts that allows easy linking of commands and aliases to a function. Not only does it streamline the process of pairing words to a function, it parses user-input all by it self!

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PyCommandsTool Is Now On 2.1.x, this document is for 2.0.x, I will be updating this document soon!

PyCommandsTool 2.0.X

PyCommandsTool, through the magic of Decorators, allows you to easily bind commands to tokens that can be input in the console and executed seamlessly! Read below for more info!

For around two years, PyCommandsTool was deprecated. However, I have returned to development on it for a project that uses this tool. I have updated it immensely and hope it can be of as much use to you all as it has been to me.

Getting Started: Commands() | add_command() | execute()
Advanced Functions: help command | command class

Copyright Haven Selph 2022, MIT License, see LICENSE.md file for more info.

Key Features

  • Allows any function to be linked to a custom name and aliases.
  • Parses user input and allows the passing of function arguments ex:
    • <command> arg1 arg2 "arg 3"
    • <command> arg1=str arg2=#int
    • <command> arg1=[this, is, a, list] arg2=str
    • Parser also has specific errors, and you can handle them as you wish! For instance, if a command is not found, execute will return with a NoSuchCommand error. Or, if no input is passed, it will return NoValidInput. There are a couple more instances, check below for more info on specific parts!
  • Auto generated help command to list all of your commands and their uses. (Requires you to set them explicitly.)
  • Very customizable settings so you can use this tool how you want to!

Installing The Tool

Linux/Windows:  
pip install PyCommandsTool  

Using The Tool

from PyCommandsTool import Commands

COMMANDMODULE = Commands()


# This is a decorator, it passes the below function as the first argument!
@COMMANDMODULE.add_command("hi", does="prints hello world")
def hi():
	print("Hello world!")


# You can pass an infinite number of names for the command to be known as
# then at the end, you can pass "does" so you can have a description for it!
@COMMANDMODULE.add_command("echo", "repeat", "print", does="prints any passed arguments")
def echo(*args):
	for x in args:
		print(str(x))


@COMMANDMODULE.add_command("echotwice", "repeattwice", "printtwice", does="prints any passed arguments; but twice")
def echotwice(*args):
	print(args)
	for x in args:
		print(str(x), str(x), sep="\n")


# Decorators are just a pretty way of doing the below:
def add(a: int, b: int, *args: int, print_it: bool = True) -> int:
	x = sum((a, b, *args))
	if print_it:
		print(x)
	return x


# Notice how in this, I pass the function as an argument. Functionally, this works EXACTLY the same as the above "decorators"
add = COMMANDMODULE.add_command("add", does="returns the sum of all passed arguments (integers required)")(add)

# Now that you've made and registered all your commands, you can create an input loop:
try:
	while True:
		try:
			last = COMMANDMODULE.execute(input(">>> "))
			if last[0] == 0:
				# Code did not encounter an error!
				pass
		except COMMANDMODULE.NoValidInput as e:
			# This is actually a ParseError which can be caught as shown below this except statement!
			print(e)

		except COMMANDMODULE.ParseError as e:
			# Code here runs when any parse error is thrown!
			print(e)
		except COMMANDMODULE.NoSuchCommand as e:
			# Code here runs if the command passed doesn't exist!
			print(e)
		except TypeError as e:
			# This is the except statement you need to add.
			print(e)

except KeyboardInterrupt:
	# Code here runs when CTRL+C is pressed, or when KeyboardInterrupt
	# is thrown as an error.
	pass

The above code will wait for input. Here's what it would output if you were to input "invalidcommand":

inavalid command output

Here's what it would output if you input the add command, but didn't pass integers to it:

error output

Since this tool doesn't actually catch errors, you are going to have to do this yourself. To stop this from happening, you could add an except to your input loop:

try:
	...
except ... as e:
	...
except TypeError as e:
	# This is the except statement you need to add.
	print(e)

Now, the output after this change would be:

better error output

Make sure to read the DOCs for more info. Thanks for using PyCommandsTool!

Issues?

If you believe you have found a REAL issue with my tool, open a GitHub Issue and describe it thoroughly. Please include your code (or something alike that reproduces it) and ANY changes to mine. If you know of a fix, you could also describe that to help me get it fixed quicker!

About

PyCommands is a module intended for quick and high-level scripts that allows easy linking of commands and aliases to a function. Not only does it streamline the process of pairing words to a function, it parses user-input all by it self!

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