Commandlines Library Documentation¶
commandlines ¶
What is Commandlines?¶
Commandlines is a Python library for command line application development that supports command line argument parsing, command string validation testing, & application logic. It has no external dependencies and provides broad Python interpreter support for Python 2.6+, Python 3.3+, pypy, and pypy3 across OS X, Linux, and Windows platforms.
The library supports application development with POSIX guideline compliant [*] command argument styles, the GNU argument style extensions to the POSIX guidelines (including long option syntax and variable position of options among arguments), and command suite style application arguments that include one or more sub-commands to the executable.
[*] | with the exception of the short single option-argument definition syntax that does not include an intervening space character (e.g. -ofile ) |
How Do I Use It?¶
The command line string to your executable script is parsed to multiple objects that are derived from builtin Python types.
The Command Object¶
Instantiate a commandlines
Command object:
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()
and use the following instance attributes and methods to develop your application:
Arguments¶
Command Line Arguments | Command Example | Accessed/Tested With |
---|---|---|
Length of arg list | $ spam eggs -t --out file |
c.argc == 4 |
Command suite sub-commands | $ spam eggs |
c.subcmd == "eggs" |
Command suite sub-sub-commands | $ spam eggs overeasy |
c.subsubcmd == "overeasy" |
Short switch syntax | $ spam -e |
c.contains_switches('e') |
Long switch syntax | $ spam --eggs |
c.contains_switches('eggs') |
Multiple switches | $ spam -e --eggs |
c.contains_switches('e', 'eggs') |
Short opt-arg definition syntax | $ spam -o eggs |
c.get_definition('o') |
Long opt-arg definition syntax | $ spam --out eggs |
c.get_definition('out') |
Alt long opt-arg definition syntax | $ spam --out=eggs |
c.get_definition('out') |
Multiple same option definitions | $ spam -o eggs -o omelets |
c.get_multiple_definitions('o') |
Multi-option short syntax switches | $ spam -mpns eggs |
c.contains_mops('m') |
Next positional argument | $ spam eggs test/path |
c.get_arg_after('eggs') |
Positional Arguments¶
Positional arguments use a 0 based index starting at the first argument
to the executable (i.e. sys.argv[1:]
) and are maintained as
attributes in the Command object. Individual attribute support is
provided for the first five positional arguments and the last positional
argument. An ordered list of all positional arguments is available in
the arguments
attribute.
Positional Argument | Command Example | Accessed/Tested With |
---|---|---|
Positional argument at index 0 | $ spam eggs |
c.arg0 |
Positional argument at index 1 | $ spam eggs bacon |
c.arg1 |
Positional argument at index 2 | $ spam eggs bacon toast |
c.arg2 |
Positional argument at index 3 | $ spam eggs bacon toast cereal |
c.arg3 |
Positional argument at index 4 | $ spam eggs bacon toast cereal milk |
c.arg4 |
Last positional argument | $ spam eggs -b --toast filepath |
c.arglp |
All positional arguments | $ spam eggs -b - -toast filepath |
c.arguments |
Default Option-Argument Definitions¶
Define option-argument defaults in a defaults
Command instance
attribute. This attribute is defined as an empty Python dictionary upon
instantiation of the Command object. Use standard key index-based Python
dictionary assignments or the set_defaults
assignment method in the
Command class to define default values. Default values can take any type
that is permissible as a Python dictionary value.
Here are examples of each approach that define defaults for output
and level
options:
Key Index-Based Default Assignments¶
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()
c.defaults['output'] = "test.txt"
c.defaults['level'] = 10
Method-Based Default Assignments¶
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()
default_options = {
'output' : 'test.txt',
'level' : 10
}
c.set_defaults(default_options)
To test for the presence of a default option definition and obtain its
value, use the contains_defaults
and get_default
methods,
respectively:
# continued from code examples above
if c.contains_definitions('output'):
dosomething(c.get_definition('output'))
elif c.contains_defaults('output'):
dosomething(c.get_default('output'))
else:
dosomethingelse()
Help, Usage, and Version Request Testing Methods¶
Help, usage, and version command line requests are tested with methods:
Test Type | Command Example | Tested With |
---|---|---|
Help request, short | $ spam -h |
c.is_help_request() |
Help request, long | $ spam --help |
c.is_help_request() |
Usage request | $ spam --usage |
c.is_usage_request() |
Version request, short | $ spam -v |
c.is_version_request() |
Version request, long | $ spam --version |
c.is_version_request() |
Testing Methods for Other Commonly Used Switches¶
Test Type | Command Example | Tested With |
---|---|---|
Verbose standard output | $ spam eggs --verbose |
c.is_verbose_request() |
Quiet standard output | $ spam eggs --quiet |
c.is_quiet_request() |
Special Command Line Idioms¶
The double dash idiom escapes all subsequent tokens from option/argument parsing. Methods are available to determine whether a double dash token is present in a command and obtain an ordered list of all command line arguments that follow this idiom:
Command Line Idioms | Command Example | Accessed/Tested With |
---|---|---|
Double dash idiom | $ spam eggs -- -badfile |
c.has_double_dash() |
Double dash arguments | $ spam eggs -- -badfile -badfile2 |
c.get_double_dash_args() |
Application Logic Testing Methods¶
Test Type | Command Example | Tested With |
---|---|---|
Positional command sequence | $ spam eggs doit |
c.has_command_sequence('eggs', 'doit') |
Single switch | $ spam -s |
c.contains_switches('s') |
Multiple switch | $ spam -s --eggs |
c.contains_switches('s', 'eggs') |
Single definition | $ spam -o eggs |
c.contains_definitions('o') |
Multiple different definitions | $ spam -o eggs --with bacon |
c.contains_definitions('o', 'with') |
Multiple same definitions | $ spam -o eggs -o bacon |
c.contains_multi_definitions('o') |
Positional argument | $ spam eggs --coffee |
c.has_args_after('eggs') |
Acceptable positional arg | $ spam eggs toaster |
c.next_arg_is_in('eggs', ['toaster', 'coffeepot']) |
Command String Validation Methods¶
Test Type | Failure Example | Tested With |
---|---|---|
Missing arguments | $ spam |
c.does_not_validate_missing_args() |
Expected argument number | $ spam eggs |
c.does_not_validate_n_args(2) |
Missing opt-arg definitions | $ spam -o --eggs |
c.does_not_validate_missing_defs() |
Missing switches | $ spam eggs |
c.does_not_validate_missing_switches() |
Missing multi-option short syntax switches | $ spam -o eggs |
c.does_not_validate_missing_mops() |
Development with Commandlines¶
To facilitate development with Commandlines, you can print the string
returned by the Command obj_string()
method to view a list of the
parsed arguments from example commands:
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()
print(c.obj_string())
sys.exit(0)
For example, if you execute your script with the command
spam eggs --toast -b --drink=milk filepath
and include the above
print statement in your source, you will see the following in your
terminal emulator:
$ spam eggs --toast -b --drink=milk filepath
obj.argc = 5
obj.arguments = ['eggs', '--toast', '-b', '--drink=milk', 'filepath']
obj.defaults = {}
obj.switches = {'toast', 'b'}
obj.defs = {'drink': 'milk'}
obj.mdefs = {}
obj.mops = {}
obj.arg0 = 'eggs'
obj.arg1 = '--toast'
obj.arg2 = '-b'
obj.arg3 = '--drink=milk'
obj.arg4 = 'filepath'
obj.arglp = 'filepath'
obj.subcmd = 'eggs'
obj.subsubcmd = '--toast'
API Documentation¶
You can view full documentation of the Command class here.
If you would like to dig into lower level objects in the commandlines package, you can view the library API documentation.
Exceptions that are used in the commandlines package are documented here.
How to Include Commandlines in Your Project¶
For Projects That Will Be Distributed to Others¶
Add the commandlines
package dependency to your project setup.py
file in the install_requires
field like so:
setup(
...
install_requires=["commandlines"],
...
)
Then, enter the following command to test your project locally:
$ python setup.py develop
Import the commandlines
package in your project and instantiate a
Command object by adding the following lines to your Python script:
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()
And away you go...
The Commandlines package will be installed automatically for users who
install your releases via pip
or your project setup.py
file
(i.e. with the command $ python setup.py install
).
For Local Projects That Are Not Intended for Redistribution¶
Install the Commandlines package with the command:
$ pip install commandlines
Import the commandlines
package in your project and instantiate a
Command object by adding the following lines to your Python script:
from commandlines import Command
c = Command()