argser¶
GitHub | PyPI | Docs | Examples | Installation | Changelog
Arguments parsing without boilerplate.
Features:¶
arguments and type hints in IDE
easy nested sub-commands
sane defaults for arguments’ params (ie if default of arg is 3 then type should be int, or when annotation/type/default is
bool
then generate 2 arguments: for true value--arg
and for false--no-arg
, …)𝕡𝕣𝕖𝕥𝕥𝕪 𝕡𝕣𝕚𝕟𝕥𝕚𝕟𝕘
support for argparse actions
common options/arguments reusability
auto shortcuts generation:
--verbose -> -v, --foo_bar -> --fb
auto completion in shell (tnx to argcomplete)
Installation¶
pip install argser
pip install argser[tabulate] # for fancy tables support
pip install argser[argcomplete] # for shell auto completion
pip install argser[all]
Notes for examples¶
If second parameter of parse_args
is string (as in almost all examples) then it will be parsed,
otherwise arguments to parse will be taken from command line.
Simple example¶
from argser import parse_args
class Args:
a = 'a'
foo = 1
bar: bool
bar_baz = 42, "bar_baz help"
args = parse_args(Args, show=True)
argparse alternative
```python from argparse import ArgumentParser parser = ArgumentParser() parser.add_argument('-a', type=str, default='a', help="str, default: 'a'") parser.add_argument('--foo', '-f', dest='foo', type=int, default=1, help="int, default: 1") parser.add_argument('--bar', '-b', dest='bar', action='store_true', help="bool, default: None") parser.add_argument('--no-bar', '--no-b', dest='bar', action='store_false') parser.set_defaults(bar=None) parser.add_argument('--bar-baz', dest='bar_baz', default=42, help="int, default: 42. bar_baz help") args = parser.parse_args() print(args) ```❯ python playground.py -a "aaa bbb" -f 100500 --no-b
>>> Args(bar=False, a='aaa bbb', foo=100500, bar_baz=42)
❯ python playground.py -h
usage: playground.py [-h] [--bar] [--no-bar] [-a A] [--foo F] [--bar-baz B]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--bar, -b bool, default: None
--no-bar, --no-b
-a A str, default: 'a'
--foo F, -f F int, default: 1
--bar-baz B, --bb B int, default: 42. bar_baz help
Get arguments from function¶
import argser
def foo(a, b: int, c=1.2):
return [a, b, c]
assert argser.call(foo, '1 2 -c 3.4') == ['1', 2, 3.4]
Sub-commands¶
from argser import parse_args, sub_command
class Args:
a: bool
b = []
c = 5
class SubArgs:
d = 1
e = '2'
sub = sub_command(SubArgs, help='help message for sub-command')
args = parse_args(Args, '-a -b a b -c 10', parser_help='help message for root parser')
assert args.a is True
assert args.b == ['a', 'b']
assert args.c == 10
assert args.sub is None
args = parse_args(Args, '--no-a -c 10 sub -d 5 -e "foo bar"')
assert args.a is False
assert args.sub.d == 5
assert args.sub.e == 'foo bar'
❯ python playground.py -h
usage: playground.py [-h] [-a] [--no-a] [-b [B [B ...]]] [-c C] {sub} ...
positional arguments:
{sub}
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-a bool, default: None
--no-a
-b [B [B ...]] List[str], default: []
-c C int, default: 5
❯ python playground.py sub1 -h
usage: playground.py sub [-h] [-d D] [-e E]
help message for sub-command
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-d D int, default: 1
-e E str, default: '2'
Can be deep nested:
from argser import parse_args, sub_command
class Args:
a = 1
class Sub1:
b = 1
class Sub2:
c = 1
class Sub3:
d = 1
sub3 = sub_command(Sub3)
sub2 = sub_command(Sub2)
sub1 = sub_command(Sub1)
args = parse_args(Args, '-a 1 sub1 -b 2 sub2 -c 3 sub3 -d 4')
Sub-commands from functions¶
import argser
subs = argser.SubCommands()
@subs.add
def foo():
return 'foo'
@subs.add(description="foo bar") # with additional arguments for sub-parser
def bar(a, b=1):
return [a, b]
assert subs.parse('foo') == 'foo'
assert subs.parse('bar 1 -b 2') == ['1', 2]
Installation¶
pip install argser
pip install argser[tabulate] # for fancy table support
pip install argser[argcomplete] # for shell auto completion
pip install argser[all]
Examples¶
Sub-commands¶
>>> from argser import parse_args, sub_command
>>> class Args:
... a: bool
... b = []
... c = 5
... class Sub1:
... d = 1
... e = '2'
... class Sub11:
... a = 5
... sub11 = sub_command(Sub11)
... sub1 = sub_command(Sub1)
... class Sub2:
... f = 1
... g = '2'
... sub2 = sub_command(Sub2)
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a -c 10')
>>> assert args.a is True
>>> assert args.c == 10
>>> assert args.sub1 is None
>>> assert args.sub2 is None
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a -c 10 sub1 -d 5 sub11 -a 6')
>>> assert args.sub1.d == 5
>>> assert args.sub1.sub11.a == 6
>>> assert args.sub2 is None
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a -c 10 sub2 -g "foo bar"')
>>> assert args.sub1 is None
>>> assert args.sub2.g == "foo bar"
Arguments¶
str / int / float¶
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... a: str # default is None
... b = 2 # default is 2
... c: float = Opt(default=3.0, help="a3") # default is 3.0, with additional help text
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a "foo bar" -b 5 -c 4.2')
>>> assert args.a == 'foo bar'
>>> assert args.b == 5
>>> assert args.c == 4.2
booleans¶
>>> class Args:
... a: bool # default is None, to change use flags: -a or --no-a
... b = True # default is True, to change to False: ./script.py --no-b
... c = False # default is False, to change to True: ./script.py -c
... d: bool = Opt(bool_flag=False) # to change - specify value after flag: `-d 1` or `-d false` or ...
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-d 0')
>>> assert args.a is None
>>> assert args.b is True
>>> assert args.c is False
>>> assert args.d is False
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a --no-b -c -d 1')
>>> assert args.a is True
>>> assert args.b is False
>>> assert args.c is True
>>> assert args.d is True
lists¶
>>> from typing import List
>>> class Args:
... a = [] # default = [], type = str, nargs = *
... b: List[int] = [] # default = [], type = int, nargs = *
... c = [1.0] # default = [], type = float, nargs = +
... d: List[int] = Opt(default=[], nargs='+') # default = [], type = int, nargs = +
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a "foo bar" "baz"')
>>> assert args.a == ["foo bar", "baz"]
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-b 1 2 3')
>>> assert args.b == [1, 2, 3]
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-c 1.1 2.2')
>>> assert args.c == [1.1, 2.2]
>>> try:
... args = parse_args(Args, '-d') # error, -d should have more then one element
... assert 0
... except SystemExit:
... assert 1
positional arguments¶
>>> from argser import Arg
>>> class Args:
... a: float = Arg()
... b: str = Arg()
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '5 "foo bar"')
>>> assert args.a == 5
>>> assert args.b == 'foo bar'
different prefixes¶
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... aaa: int = Opt(prefix='-')
... bbb: int = Opt(prefix='++')
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-aaa 42 ++bbb 42')
>>> assert args.aaa == 42
>>> assert args.bbb == 42
argparse params¶
>>> from typing import List
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... a = Opt(help="foo bar") # with additional help message
... b = Opt(action='count')
... c: List[int] = Opt(action='append')
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a foo -bbb -c 1 -c 2')
>>> assert args.a == 'foo'
>>> assert args.b == 3
>>> assert args.c == [1, 2]
Actions¶
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... a = Opt(action='store_const', default='42', const=42)
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '')
>>> assert args.a == '42'
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a')
>>> assert args.a == 42
>>> from typing import List
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... a: List[int] = Opt(action='append', default=[])
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a 1')
>>> assert args.a == [1]
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-a 1 -a 2')
>>> assert args.a == [1, 2]
>>> from argser import Opt
>>> class Args:
... verbose: int = Opt(action='count', default=0)
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '')
>>> assert args.verbose == 0
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '-vvv')
>>> assert args.verbose == 3
Reusability¶
>>> class CommonArgs:
... value: int
... verbose = Opt(action='count', default=0)
... model_path = 'foo.pkl'
>>> class Args1(CommonArgs):
... value: str # redefine
... epoch = 10
>>> class Args2(CommonArgs):
... type = 'bert'
>>> args = parse_args(Args1, '--value "foo bar" --epoch 5')
>>> assert args.epoch == 5
>>> args = parse_args(Args2, '--value 10 --type albert')
>>> assert args.type == 'albert'
Call function with parsed arguments¶
>>> import argser
>>> def main(a, b: int, c=1.2, d: List[bool]=None):
... return [a, b, c, d]
>>> assert argser.call(main, '1 2 -c 3.3 -d 1 0 1 1') == [
... '1',
... 2,
... 3.3,
... [True, False, True, True],
... ]
Or as decorator:¶
>>> import argser
>>> @argser.call('1 2')
... def foo(a, b: int):
... assert a == '1' and b == 2
In examples above a
(implicit string) and b
(int) are positional argument because they don’t have default values.
Multiple sub-commands:¶
>>> from argser import SubCommands
>>> subs = SubCommands()
>>> @subs.add(description="foo bar")
... def foo(): return 'foo'
>>> @subs.add
... def bar(a, b: int): return [a, b]
>>> subs.parse('foo')
'foo'
>>> subs.parse('bar 1 2')
['1', 2]
Override options globally¶
>>> import argser
>>> class Args:
... a = 1
... b = True
... ccc_ddd = 'foo'
>>> args = argser.parse_args(
... Args,
... '+a 42 +b false +ccc+ddd "foo bar"', # read from command if None
... make_shortcuts=False, # +ccc+ddd will not generate cd now
... bool_flag=False, # bool arg will require bool value near flag
... prefix='+', # change default prefix
... repl=('_', '+'), # change auto-replacer options (from, to)
... override=True, # only required if you need to override args defined with Opt/Arg
... )
>>> assert args.a == 42
>>> assert args.b is False
>>> assert args.ccc_ddd == 'foo bar'
Display arguments¶
>>> from argser import sub_command, parse_args
>>> class Args:
... a = 1
... b = 'foo'
... class Sub:
... a = 'foo bar'
... sub = sub_command(Sub)
>>> args = parse_args(
... Args,
... '-a 42 sub -a "fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar"',
... show='table',
... )
arg value arg value
----- ------- ------ -----------------------------
a 42 sub__a 'fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
b 'foo' baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar'
Or as tree:
>>> args = parse_args(
... Args,
... '-a 42 sub -a "fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaz"',
... show='tree',
... )
Args
├ a = 42
├ b = 'foo'
└ sub = Sub
├ a = 'fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
└ baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaz'
Or in one line:
>>> args = parse_args(
... Args,
... '-a 42 sub -a "fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar"',
... show=True,
... )
Args(a=42, b='foo', sub=Sub(a='fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar'))
Or after parsing:
>>> from argser import print_args
>>> print_args(args, 'table')
arg value arg value
----- ------- ------ -----------------------------
a 42 sub__a 'fooooooooo baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar
b 'foo' baaaaaaaaaaaaaaar'
Using existing parser¶
>>> from argparse import ArgumentParser, Namespace
>>> parser = ArgumentParser(prog='prog')
>>> action = parser.add_argument('--foo', default=42, type=int)
>>> class Args:
... __namespace__: Namespace # just for hints in IDE
... a = 1
... b = True
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '--foo 100 -a 5 --no-b', parser=parser, parser_prog='WILL NOT BE USED')
>>> args.a, args.b
(5, False)
>>> args.__namespace__.foo
100
Inspection¶
After parsing each attribute of parsed class will be replaced with populated instance of argser.fields.Opt
.
>>> class Args:
... a: bool
... b = 1, "help for a"
>>> args = parse_args(Args, '--no-a -b 2')
>>> assert isinstance(Args.a, Opt)
>>> assert Args.a.type is bool
>>> assert args.a is False
>>> assert isinstance(Args.b, Opt)
>>> assert Args.b.type is int
>>> assert Args.b.help == "help for a"
>>> assert args.b == 2
Arguments factory¶
From callable:
>>> def read_a(value: str):
... return int(value) + 1
>>> class Args:
... a = Opt(default=1, factory=read_a)
>>> parse_args(Args, '-a 2').a
3
From method:
>>> class Args:
... a = 1
... def read_a(self, value: str):
... return int(value) + 1
>>> parse_args(Args, '-a 2').a
3
From method with different name:
>>> class Args:
... a = Opt(default=1, factory='get_a')
... def get_a(self, value: str):
... return int(value) + 1
>>> parse_args(Args, '-a 2').a
3
Auto completion¶
Check out argcomplete for setup guide.
Add autocompletes:
# using argcomplete's script
eval "$(register-python-argcomplete foo.py)"
# using argser
eval "$(argser auto)" # for all scripts with PYTHON_ARGCOMPLETE_OK (in current dir)
eval "$(argser auto foo.py)" # specific file
eval "$(argser auto /path/to/dir)" # for all scripts (with PYTHON_ARGCOMPLETE_OK) in /path/to/dir
eval "$(argser auto /path/to/dir foo.py)" # combine
eval "$(argser auto --no-mark)" # add autocomplete to every script