Minimal declarative cli tool.
from decli import cli
data = {
"prog": "myapp",
"description": "Process some integers.",
"arguments": [
{
"name": "integers",
"metavar": "N",
"type": int,
"nargs": "+",
"help": "an integer for the accumulator",
},
{
"name": "--sum",
"dest": "accumulate",
"action": "store_const",
"const": sum,
"default": max,
"help": "sum the integers (default: find the max)",
},
],
}
parser = cli(data)
parser.parse_args()
>> parser.print_help() usage: myapp [-h] [--sum] N [N ...] Process some integers. positional arguments: N an integer for the accumulator optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --sum sum the integers (default: find the max)
In [4]: args = parser.parse_args("--sum 3 2 1".split()) In [5]: args.accumulate(args.integers) Out[5]: 6
Contents
Decli is minimal wrapper around argparse.
It's useful when writing big applications that have many arguments and subcommands, this way it'll be more clear.
It's a minimal library to rapidly create an interface separated from your app.
It's possible to use any argument from argparse and it works really well with it.
Forget about copy pasting the argparse functions, if you are lazy like me, this library should be really handy!
Many cases were tested, but it's possible that not everything was covered, so if you find anything, please report it.
pip install -U decli
or alternatively:
poetry add decli
Create the dictionary in which the cli tool is declared.
The same arguments argparse use are accepted, except parents, which is ignored.
- prog - The name of the program (default: sys.argv[0])
- usage - The string describing the program usage (default: generated from arguments added to parser)
- description - Text to display before the argument help (default: none)
- epilog - Text to display after the argument help (default: none)
- formatter_class - A class for customizing the help output
- prefix_chars - The set of characters that prefix optional arguments (default: ‘-‘)
- fromfile_prefix_chars - The set of characters that prefix files from which additional arguments should be read (default: None)
- argument_default - The global default value for arguments (default: None)
- conflict_handler - The strategy for resolving conflicting optionals (usually unnecessary)
- add_help - Add a -h/--help option to the parser (default: True)
- allow_abbrev - Allows long options to be abbreviated if the abbreviation is unambiguous. (default: True)
More info in the argparse page
Example:
data = {
"prog": "myapp",
"description": "This app does something cool",
"epilog": "And that's it"
}
It's just a list with dictionaries. To add aliases just use a list instead of a string.
Accepted values:
- name: - Either a name or a list of option strings, e.g. foo or -f, --foo.
- action - The basic type of action to be taken when this argument is encountered at the command line.
- nargs - The number of command-line arguments that should be consumed.
- const - A constant value required by some action and nargs selections.
- default - The value produced if the argument is absent from the command line.
- type - The type to which the command-line argument should be converted.
- choices - A container of the allowable values for the argument.
- required - Whether or not the command-line option may be omitted (optionals only).
- help - A brief description of what the argument does.
- metavar - A name for the argument in usage messages.
- dest - The name of the attribute to be added to the object returned by parse_args().
More info about arguments
Example:
data = {
"prog": "myapp",
"description": "This app does something cool",
"epilog": "And that's it",
"arguments": [
{
"name": "--foo"
},
{
"name": ["-b", "--bar"]
}
]
}
Just a dictionary where the most important key is commands which is a list of the commands.
Accepted values:
- title - title for the sub-parser group in help output; by default “subcommands” if description is provided, otherwise uses title for positional arguments
- description - description for the sub-parser group in help output, by default None
- commands - list of dicts describing the commands. Same arguments as the main cli are supported. And func which is really important.
- prog - usage information that will be displayed with sub-command help, by default the name of the program and any positional arguments before the subparser argument
- action - the basic type of action to be taken when this argument is encountered at the command line
- dest - name of the attribute under which sub-command name will be stored; by default None and no value is stored
- required - Whether or not a subcommand must be provided, by default False.
- help - help for sub-parser group in help output, by default None
- metavar - string presenting available sub-commands in help; by default it is None and presents sub-commands in form {cmd1, cmd2, ..}
More info about subcommands
Usually in a sub-command it's useful to specify to which function are they pointing to. That's why each command should have this parameter.
When you are building an app which does multiple things, each function should be mapped to a command this way, using the func argument.
Example:
from decli import cli
data = {
"prog": "myapp",
"description": "This app does something cool",
"epilog": "And that's it",
"subcommands": {
"title": "main",
"commands": [
{
"name": "sum",
"help": "new project",
"func": sum,
"arguments": [
{
"name": "integers",
"metavar": "N",
"type": int,
"nargs": "+",
"help": "an integer for the accumulator",
},
{"name": "--name", "nargs": "?"},
],
}
]
}
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args(["sum 1 2 3".split()])
args.func(args.integers) # Runs the sum of the integers
Used to group the arguments based on conceptual groups. This only affects the shown help, nothing else.
Example:
data = {
"prog": "app",
"arguments": [
{"name": "foo", "help": "foo help", "group": "group1"},
{"name": "choo", "help": "choo help", "group": "group1"},
{"name": "--bar", "help": "bar help", "group": "group2"},
]
}
parser = cli(data)
parser.print_help()
usage: app [-h] [--bar BAR] foo choo optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit group1: foo foo help choo choo help group2: --bar BAR bar help
A mutually exclusive group allows to execute only one optional argument (starting with --
) from the group.
If the condition is not met, it will show an error.
Example:
data = {
"prog": "app",
"arguments": [
{"name": "--foo", "help": "foo help", "exclusive_group": "group1"},
{"name": "--choo", "help": "choo help", "exclusive_group": "group1"},
{"name": "--bar", "help": "bar help", "exclusive_group": "group1"},
]
}
parser = cli(data)
parser.print_help()
usage: app [-h] [--foo FOO | --choo CHOO | --bar BAR] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --foo FOO foo help --choo CHOO choo help --bar BAR bar help
In [1]: parser.parse_args("--foo 1 --choo 2".split()) usage: app [-h] [--foo FOO | --choo CHOO | --bar BAR] app: error: argument --choo: not allowed with argument --foo
It is not possible to have groups inside exclusive groups with decli.
Decli will prevent from doing this by raising a ValueError
.
It is possible to accomplish it with argparse, but the help message generated will be broken and the exclusion won't work.
Sometimes, several cli share a common set of arguments.
Rather than repeating the definitions of these arguments,
one or more parent clis with all the shared arguments can be passed
to parents=argument
to cli.
More info about parents
Example:
parent_foo_data = {
"add_help": False,
"arguments": [{"name": "--foo-parent", "type": int}],
}
parent_bar_data = {
"add_help": False,
"arguments": [{"name": "--bar-parent", "type": int}],
}
parent_foo_cli = cli(parent_foo_data)
parent_bar_cli = cli(parent_bar_data)
parents = [parent_foo_cli, parent_bar_cli]
data = {
"prog": "app",
"arguments": [
{"name": "foo"}
]
}
parser = cli(data, parents=parents)
parser.print_help()
usage: app [-h] [--foo-parent FOO_PARENT] [--bar-parent BAR_PARENT] foo positional arguments: foo optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --foo-parent FOO_PARENT --bar-parent BAR_PARENT
from decli import cli
data = {
"prog": "myapp",
"formatter_class": argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
"description": "The software has subcommands which you can use",
"subcommands": {
"title": "main",
"description": "main commands",
"commands": [
{
"name": "all",
"help": "check every values is true",
"func": all
},
{
"name": ["s", "sum"],
"help": "new project",
"func": sum,
"arguments": [
{
"name": "integers",
"metavar": "N",
"type": int,
"nargs": "+",
"help": "an integer for the accumulator",
},
{"name": "--name", "nargs": "?"},
],
}
],
},
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args(["sum 1 2 3".split()])
args.func(args.integers) # Runs the sum of the integers
This app does nothing, but it's the min we can have:
from decli import cli
parser = cli({})
parser.print_help()
usage: ipython [-h] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit
from decli import cli
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": "echo"
}
]
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args(["foo"])
In [11]: print(args.echo) foo
When a type is specified, the argument will be treated as that type, otherwise it'll fail.
from decli import cli
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": "square",
"type": int
}
]
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args(["1"])
In [11]: print(args.echo) 1
from decli import cli
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": "--verbose",
"help": "increase output verbosity"
}
]
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args(["--verbosity 1"])
In [11]: print(args.verbosity) 1 In [15]: args = parser.parse_args([]) In [16]: args Out[16]: Namespace(verbose=None)
Flags are a boolean only (True/False) subset of options.
from decli import cli
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": "--verbose",
"action": "store_true", # defaults to False
},
{
"name": "--noisy",
"action": "store_false", # defaults to True
}
]
}
parser = cli(data)
Used to add short versions of the options.
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": ["-v", "--verbose"],
"help": "increase output verbosity"
}
]
}
This is only possible using arguments.
Only affect the way the help gets displayed. You might be looking for subcommands.
data = {
"prog": "mycli",
"arguments": [
{
"name": "--save",
"group": "main",
"help": "This save belongs to the main group",
},
{
"name": "--remove",
"group": "main",
"help": "This remove belongs to the main group",
},
],
}
parser = cli(data)
parser.print_help()
usage: mycli [-h] [--save SAVE] [--remove REMOVE] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit main: --save SAVE This save belongs to the main group --remove REMOVE This remove belongs to the main group
This is only possible using optional arguments.
data = {
"prog": "mycli",
"arguments": [
{
"name": "--save",
"exclusive_group": "main",
"help": "This save belongs to the main group",
},
{
"name": "--remove",
"exclusive_group": "main",
"help": "This remove belongs to the main group",
},
],
}
parser = cli(data)
parser.print_help()
usage: mycli [-h] [--save SAVE | --remove REMOVE] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --save SAVE This save belongs to the main group --remove REMOVE This remove belongs to the main group
data = {
"arguments": [
{
"name": "square",
"type": int,
"help": "display a square of a given number"
},
{
"name": ["-v", "--verbose"],
"action": "store_true",
"help": "increase output verbosity"
}
]
}
parser = cli(data)
args = parser.parse_args()
answer = args.square**2
if args.verbose:
print(f"the square of {args.square} equals {answer}")
else:
print(answer)
Many examples from argparse documentation are covered in test/examples.py
- Clone the repo
- Install dependencies
poetry install
- Run tests
./scripts/tests
PRs are welcome!