Related
I'm currently working on a Python script where I'd like to have general options. That is because the ultimate goal is to output a URL that has parameters, and each parameter corresponds to an input variable. So maybe the URL has the username parameter, or the date parameter, or the domain parameter, etc. If a user wants to input a username, they can type something like:
script.py -u johndoe
Then the script would take the part after -u, equal it to the variable username, and then insert it into the URL at the appropriate place.
How can I do something like this? I tried doing something with this code, but I don't know where to start, how can I use input variables alongside argparse.
import argparse
parser.add_argument('-u', '--username', action='N', type=str, nargs='+',
help='What's the username?')
args = parser.parse_args()
You can try this. If the username is not pass as argument the args.username will be None. If the username is mandatory, you should pass required=True to add_argument(...) call.
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser( description="My script")
parser.add_argument('-u', '--username', type=str,
help="What's the username?", required=False)
args = parser.parse_args()
print(args.username)
If I understand your question correctly, I think you want to know how to use the arguments in your program. You can get them by converting them to a dictonary.
args = vars(parser.parse_args())
username = args['username']
So your whole code should look something like this:
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-u','--username', help='Some help', required=True)
args = vars(parser.parse_args())
username = args['username']
print(username)
My argparse has only 3 flags (store_true) on the top level, everything else is handled through subparsers. When I run myprog.py --help, the output shows a list of all subcommands like normal, {sub1, sub2, sub3, sub4, ...}. So, the default is working great...
I usually can't remember the exact subcommand name I need, and all of its options. So I end up doing 2 help lookups:
myprog.py --help
myprog.py sub1 --help
I do this so often, I decided to cram this into one step. I would rather have my toplevel help output a huge summary, and then I scroll through the list manually. I find it is much faster (for me at least).
I was using a RawDescriptionHelpFormatter, and typing the long help output by hand. But now I have lots of subcommands, and its becoming a pain to manage.
Is there a way to get a verbose help output with just one program call?
If not, how can I iterate the subparsers of my argparse instance, and then retrieve the help output individually from each one (which I will then later glue together)?
Here is a quick outline of my argparse setup. I cleaned/stripped the code a fair bit, so this may not run without a bit of help.
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
prog='myprog.py',
formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
description=textwrap.dedent(""" You can manually type Help here """) )
parser.add_argument('--debuglog', action='store_true', help='Verbose logging for debug purposes.')
parser.add_argument('--ipyonexit', action='store_true', help='Drop into an embeded Ipython session instead of exiting command.')
subparser = parser.add_subparsers()
### --- Subparser B
parser_b = subparser.add_parser('pdfreport', description="Used to output reports in PDF format.")
parser_b.add_argument('type', type=str, choices=['flatlist', 'nested', 'custom'],
help="The type of PDF report to generate.")
parser_b.add_argument('--of', type=str, default='',
help="Override the path/name of the output file.")
parser_b.add_argument('--pagesize', type=str, choices=['letter', '3x5', '5x7'], default='letter',
help="Override page size in output PDF.")
parser_b.set_defaults(func=cmd_pdf_report)
### ---- Subparser C
parser_c = subparser.add_parser('dbtables', description="Used to perform direct DB import/export using XLS files.")
parser_c.add_argument('action', type=str, choices=['push', 'pull', 'append', 'update'],
help="The action to perform on the Database Tables.")
parser_c.add_argument('tablename', nargs="+",
help="The name(s) of the DB-Table to operate on.")
parser_c.set_defaults(func=cmd_db_tables)
args = parser.parse_args()
args.func(args)
This is a bit tricky, as argparse does not expose a list of defined sub-parsers directly. But it can be done:
import argparse
# create the top-level parser
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(prog='PROG')
parser.add_argument('--foo', action='store_true', help='foo help')
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(help='sub-command help')
# create the parser for the "a" command
parser_a = subparsers.add_parser('a', help='a help')
parser_a.add_argument('bar', type=int, help='bar help')
# create the parser for the "b" command
parser_b = subparsers.add_parser('b', help='b help')
parser_b.add_argument('--baz', choices='XYZ', help='baz help')
# print main help
print(parser.format_help())
# retrieve subparsers from parser
subparsers_actions = [
action for action in parser._actions
if isinstance(action, argparse._SubParsersAction)]
# there will probably only be one subparser_action,
# but better safe than sorry
for subparsers_action in subparsers_actions:
# get all subparsers and print help
for choice, subparser in subparsers_action.choices.items():
print("Subparser '{}'".format(choice))
print(subparser.format_help())
This example should work for python 2.7 and python 3. The example parser is from Python 2.7 documentation on argparse sub-commands.
The only thing left to do is adding a new argument for the complete help, or replacing the built in -h/--help.
Here is complete soulution with custom help handler (almost all code from #Adaephon answer):
import argparse
class _HelpAction(argparse._HelpAction):
def __call__(self, parser, namespace, values, option_string=None):
parser.print_help()
# retrieve subparsers from parser
subparsers_actions = [
action for action in parser._actions
if isinstance(action, argparse._SubParsersAction)]
# there will probably only be one subparser_action,
# but better save than sorry
for subparsers_action in subparsers_actions:
# get all subparsers and print help
for choice, subparser in subparsers_action.choices.items():
print("Subparser '{}'".format(choice))
print(subparser.format_help())
parser.exit()
# create the top-level parser
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(prog='PROG', add_help=False) # here we turn off default help action
parser.add_argument('--help', action=_HelpAction, help='help for help if you need some help') # add custom help
parser.add_argument('--foo', action='store_true', help='foo help')
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(help='sub-command help')
# create the parser for the "a" command
parser_a = subparsers.add_parser('a', help='a help')
parser_a.add_argument('bar', type=int, help='bar help')
# create the parser for the "b" command
parser_b = subparsers.add_parser('b', help='b help')
parser_b.add_argument('--baz', choices='XYZ', help='baz help')
parsed_args = parser.parse_args()
Perhaps an easier approach is to use parser.epilog:
def define_parser():
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
prog='main',
formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
)
commands = parser.add_subparsers(
title="required commands",
help='Select one of:',
)
command_list = commands.add_parser(
'list',
help='List included services',
)
command_ensure = commands.add_parser(
'ensure',
help='Provision included service',
)
command_ensure.add_argument(
"service",
help='Service name',
)
import textwrap
parser.epilog = textwrap.dedent(
f"""\
commands usage:\n
{command_list.format_usage()}
{command_ensure.format_usage()}
"""
)
return parser
parser = define_parser()
parser.print_help()
which results in the following output:
usage: main [-h] {list,ensure} ...
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
required commands:
{list,ensure} Select one of:
list List included services
ensure Provision included service
commands usage:
usage: main list [-h]
usage: main ensure [-h] service
A simpler way to iterate over the subparsers in Adaephon's example is
for subparser in [parser_a, parser_b]:
subparser.format_help()
Python does allow you to access hidden attributes like parser._actions, but that's not encouraged. It is just as easy to build your own list while defining the parser. Same goes for doing special things with the arguments. add_argument and add_subparser return their respective Action and Parser objects for a reason.
If I were making a subclass of ArgumentParser I would feel free to use _actions. But for a one off application, building my own list would be clearer.
An example:
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('mainpos')
parser.add_argument('--mainopt')
sp = parser.add_subparsers()
splist = [] # list to collect subparsers
sp1 = sp.add_parser('cmd1')
splist.append(sp1)
sp1.add_argument('--sp1opt')
sp2 = sp.add_parser('cmd2')
splist.append(sp2)
sp2.add_argument('--sp2opt')
# collect and display for helps
helps = []
helps.append(parser.format_help())
for p in splist:
helps.append(p.format_help())
print('\n'.join(helps))
# or to show just the usage
helps = []
helps.append(parser.format_usage())
for p in splist:
helps.append(p.format_usage())
print(''.join(helps))
The combined 'usage' display is:
usage: stack32607706.py [-h] [--mainopt MAINOPT] mainpos {cmd1,cmd2} ...
usage: stack32607706.py mainpos cmd1 [-h] [--sp1opt SP1OPT]
usage: stack32607706.py mainpos cmd2 [-h] [--sp2opt SP2OPT]
The display of the combined helps is long and redundant. It could be edited in various ways, either after formatting, or with special help formatters. But who is going make such choices?
I was also able to print a short help for commands using _choices_actions.
def print_help(parser):
print(parser.description)
print('\ncommands:\n')
# retrieve subparsers from parser
subparsers_actions = [
action for action in parser._actions
if isinstance(action, argparse._SubParsersAction)]
# there will probably only be one subparser_action,
# but better save than sorry
for subparsers_action in subparsers_actions:
# get all subparsers and print help
for choice in subparsers_action._choices_actions:
print(' {:<19} {}'.format(choice.dest, choice.help))
add_subparsers().add_parser() accepts not only a description, which shows up in the help of the subcommand, but also a help= which is used as one-line description in the top-level parsers' help.
The docs have this hidden in the formulation
(A help message for each subparser command, however, can be given by supplying the help= argument to add_parser() as above.)
and even in the sample code around that sentence:
>>> # create the parser for the "b" command
>>> parser_b = subparsers.add_parser('b', help='b help')
>>> parser_b.add_argument('--baz', choices='XYZ', help='baz help')
[...]
usage: PROG [-h] [--foo] {a,b} ...
positional arguments:
{a,b} sub-command help
a a help
b b help
Yes, this is not the full help for everthing, but IMHO covers the basic use case very well and is not easily discoverable.
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser("TOML FILE OVERWRITE SCRIPT")
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers()
parser_set = subparsers.add_parser('set', help='Set Toml')
parser_set.add_argument('set', help='TOMl file edit set action', action='store_true')
parser_set.add_argument('-n', '--name', type=str, help='Service Name', required=True)
parser_set.add_argument('-s', '--section', type=str, help='Toml Section Name', required=True)
parser_set.add_argument('-k', '--key', type=str, help='Toml Key of Section', required=True)
parser_set.add_argument('-v', '--value', help='New Value', required=True)
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.set:
setter = ConfigurationSetter(args.name, args.section, args.key, args.value)
setter.execute()
else:
print("Ops! Something is wrong, type --help or -h")
You can check my code maybe inspires you!
Basic intended usage:
my_framework create Project_title /path/to/project
OR
my_framework create Project_title (ie. use current working directory)
OR
my_framework update (ie. update my_framework rather than creating a new project)
I know I can make name optional by providing it with a default, but, in reality name is not optional provided the user has entered create as the first argument.
Best solution I've come up with is to use a default value for name and then, if the argument name equals its default value, throw an error. But if there's a way to make argparse do this work for me I'd rather learn to do it.
Writing two scripts, my_framework_create and my_framework_update doesn't appeal to me aesthetically.
#!/usr/bin/env python
import argparse
import os
import shutil
from subprocess import call
template_path = "/usr/local/klibs/template"
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser("MY_FRAMEWORK CLI", description='Creates a new MY_FRAMEWORK project or updates MY_FRAMEWORK')
parser.add_argument('action', choices=['create', 'update'], type=str, help='<help text>')
parser.add_argument('name', type=str, help='<help text>')
parser.add_argument('path', default=os.getcwd(), nargs="?", type=str, help='<help text>')
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.action == "create":
# do the create stuff
if args.action == "update":
# do the update stuff
The best way to do this is with a subparser
An example from the docs:
>>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
>>> subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(title='subcommands',
... description='valid subcommands',
... help='additional help')
>>> subparsers.add_parser('foo')
>>> subparsers.add_parser('bar')
>>> parser.parse_args(['-h'])
usage: [-h] {foo,bar} ...
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
subcommands:
valid subcommands
{foo,bar} additional help
In your case you would have create and update as separate subparsers.
Example:
def create(args):
# do the create stuff
print(args)
def update(args):
# do the update stuff
print(args)
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(title='subcommands',
description='valid subcommands',
help='additional help')
create_parser = subparsers.add_parser('create')
create_parser.add_argument('name', type=str)
create_parser.set_defaults(func=create)
update_parser = subparsers.add_parser('update')
update_parser.set_defaults(func=update)
I want to accomplish something like this:
-LoadFiles
-SourceFile "" -DestPath ""
-SourceFolder "" -DestPath ""
-GenericOperation
-SpecificOperation -Arga "" -Argb ""
-OtherOperation -Argc "" -Argb "" -Argc ""
A user should be able to run things like:
-LoadFiles -SourceFile "somePath" -DestPath "somePath"
or
-LoadFiles -SourceFolder "somePath" -DestPath "somePath"
Basically, if you have -LoadFiles, you are required to have either -SourceFile or -SourceFolder after. If you have -SourceFile, you are required to have -DestPath, etc.
Is this chain of required arguments for other arguments possible? If not, can I at least do something like, if you have -SourceFile, you MUST have -DestPath?
You can use subparsers in argparse
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(prog='PROG')
parser.add_argument('--foo', required=True, help='foo help')
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(help='sub-command help')
# create the parser for the "bar" command
parser_a = subparsers.add_parser('bar', help='a help')
parser_a.add_argument('bar', type=int, help='bar help')
print(parser.parse_args())
After you call parse_args on the ArgumentParser instance you've created, it'll give you a Namespace object. Simply check that if one of the arguments is present then the other one has to be there too. Like:
args = parser.parse_args()
if ('LoadFiles' in vars(args) and
'SourceFolder' not in vars(args) and
'SourceFile' not in vars(args)):
parser.error('The -LoadFiles argument requires the -SourceFolder or -SourceFile')
There are some argparse alternatives which you can easily manage cases like what you mentioned.
packages like:
click or
docopt.
If we want to get around the manual implementation of chain arguments in argparse, check out the Commands and Groups in click for instance.
Here is a sample that in case you specify --makeDependency, forces you to specify --dependency with a value as well.
This is not done by argparse alone, but also by by the program that later on validates what the user specified.
#!/usr/bin/env python
import argparse
import sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--makeDependency', help='create dependency on --dependency', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--dependency', help='dependency example')
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.makeDependency and not args.dependency:
print "error on dependency"
sys.exit(1)
print "ok!"
Assume I have a program that uses argparse to process command line arguments/options. The following will print the 'help' message:
./myprogram -h
or:
./myprogram --help
But, if I run the script without any arguments whatsoever, it doesn't do anything. What I want it to do is to display the usage message when it is called with no arguments. How is that done?
This answer comes from Steven Bethard on Google groups. I'm reposting it here to make it easier for people without a Google account to access.
You can override the default behavior of the error method:
import argparse
import sys
class MyParser(argparse.ArgumentParser):
def error(self, message):
sys.stderr.write('error: %s\n' % message)
self.print_help()
sys.exit(2)
parser = MyParser()
parser.add_argument('foo', nargs='+')
args = parser.parse_args()
Note that the above solution will print the help message whenever the error
method is triggered. For example, test.py --blah will print the help message
too if --blah isn't a valid option.
If you want to print the help message only if no arguments are supplied on the
command line, then perhaps this is still the easiest way:
import argparse
import sys
parser=argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('foo', nargs='+')
if len(sys.argv)==1:
parser.print_help(sys.stderr)
sys.exit(1)
args=parser.parse_args()
Note that parser.print_help() prints to stdout by default. As init_js suggests, use parser.print_help(sys.stderr) to print to stderr.
Instead of writing a class, a try/except can be used instead
try:
options = parser.parse_args()
except:
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(0)
The upside is that the workflow is clearer and you don't need a stub class. The downside is that the first 'usage' line is printed twice.
This will need at least one mandatory argument. With no mandatory arguments, providing zero args on the commandline is valid.
With argparse you could use ArgumentParser.print_usage():
parser.argparse.ArgumentParser()
# parser.add_args here
# sys.argv includes a list of elements starting with the program
if len(sys.argv) < 2:
parser.print_usage()
sys.exit(1)
Printing help
ArgumentParser.print_usage(file=None)
Print a brief description of how the ArgumentParser should be invoked on the command line. If file is None, sys.stdout is assumed.
The cleanest solution will be to manually pass default argument if none were given on the command line:
parser.parse_args(args=None if sys.argv[1:] else ['--help'])
Complete example:
import argparse, sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--host', default='localhost', help='Host to connect to')
# parse arguments
args = parser.parse_args(args=None if sys.argv[1:] else ['--help'])
# use your args
print("connecting to {}".format(args.host))
This will print complete help (not short usage) if called w/o arguments.
If you associate default functions for (sub)parsers, as is mentioned under add_subparsers, you can simply add it as the default action:
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.set_defaults(func=lambda x: parser.print_usage())
args = parser.parse_args()
args.func(args)
Add the try-except if you raise exceptions due to missing positional arguments.
If you have arguments that must be specified for the script to run - use the required parameter for ArgumentParser as shown below:-
parser.add_argument('--foo', required=True)
parse_args() will report an error if the script is run without any arguments.
Throwing my version into the pile here:
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
args = parser.parse_args()
if not vars(args):
parser.print_help()
parser.exit(1)
You may notice the parser.exit - I mainly do it like that because it saves an import line if that was the only reason for sys in the file...
There are a pair of one-liners with sys.argv[1:] (a very common Python's idiom to refer the command line arguments, being sys.argv[0] the script's name) that can do the job.
The first one is self-explanatory, clean and pythonic:
args = parser.parse_args(None if sys.argv[1:] else ['-h'])
The second one is a little hackier. Combining the previously evaluated fact that an empty list is False with the True == 1 and False == 0 equivalences you get this:
args = parser.parse_args([None, ['-h']][not sys.argv[1:]])
Maybe too many brackets, but pretty clear if a previous argument selection was made.
_, *av = sys.argv
args = parser.parse_args([None, ['-h']][not av])
parser.print_help()
parser.exit()
The parser.exit method also accept a status (returncode), and a message value (include a trailing newline yourself!).
an opinionated example,
:)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
""" Example argparser based python file
"""
import argparse
ARGP = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description=__doc__,
formatter_class=argparse.RawTextHelpFormatter,
)
ARGP.add_argument('--example', action='store_true', help='Example Argument')
def main(argp=None):
if argp is None:
argp = ARGP.parse_args() # pragma: no cover
if 'soemthing_went_wrong' and not argp.example:
ARGP.print_help()
ARGP.exit(status=64, message="\nSomething went wrong, --example condition was not set\n")
if __name__ == '__main__':
main() # pragma: no cover
Example calls:
$ python3 ~/helloworld.py; echo $?
usage: helloworld.py [-h] [--example]
Example argparser based python file
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--example Example Argument
Something went wrong, --example condition was not set
64
$ python3 ~/helloworld.py --example; echo $?
0
Most of the answers here required another module, such as sys, to be imported or were using optional arguments. I wanted to discover an answer that used only argparse, worked with required arguments, and if possible worked without catching exceptions. I ended up with the following:
import argparse
if __name__ == '__main__':
arg_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(add_help=False)
arg_parser.add_argument('input_file', type=str, help='The path to the input file.')
arg_parser.add_argument('output_file', type=str, help='The path to the output file.')
arg_parser.add_argument('-h','--help', action='store_true', help='show this help message and exit')
arg_parser.usage = arg_parser.format_help()
args = arg_parser.parse_args()
The main idea was to use the format_help function in order to provide the help string to the usage statement. Setting add_help to False in the call to ArgumentParser() prevents the help statement from printing twice in certain circumstances. However, I had to create an argument for the optional help argument that mimicked the typical help message once it was set to False in order to display the optional help argument in the help message. The action is set to store_true in the help argument to prevent the help message from filling in a value like HELP for the parameter when it prints the help message.
So for a really simple answer. Most of the time with argparse you are checking to see if parameters are set anyway, to call a function that does something.
If no parameters, just else out at the end and print the help. Simple and works.
import argparse
import sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
group = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
group.add_argument("--holidays", action='store_true')
group.add_argument("--people", action='store_true')
args=parser.parse_args()
if args.holidays:
get_holidays()
elif args.people:
get_people()
else:
parser.print_help(sys.stderr)
Here is another way to do it, if you need something flexible where you want to display help if specific params are passed, none at all or more than 1 conflicting arg:
import argparse
import sys
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-d', '--days', required=False, help="Check mapped inventory that is x days old", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-e', '--event', required=False, action="store", dest="event_id",
help="Check mapped inventory for a specific event", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-b', '--broker', required=False, action="store", dest="broker_id",
help="Check mapped inventory for a broker", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-k', '--keyword', required=False, action="store", dest="event_keyword",
help="Check mapped inventory for a specific event keyword", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-p', '--product', required=False, action="store", dest="product_id",
help="Check mapped inventory for a specific product", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-m', '--metadata', required=False, action="store", dest="metadata",
help="Check mapped inventory for specific metadata, good for debugging past tix", default=None)
parser.add_argument('-u', '--update', required=False, action="store_true", dest="make_updates",
help="Update the event for a product if there is a difference, default No", default=False)
args = parser.parse_args()
days = args.days
event_id = args.event_id
broker_id = args.broker_id
event_keyword = args.event_keyword
product_id = args.product_id
metadata = args.metadata
make_updates = args.make_updates
no_change_counter = 0
change_counter = 0
req_arg = bool(days) + bool(event_id) + bool(broker_id) + bool(product_id) + bool(event_keyword) + bool(metadata)
if not req_arg:
print("Need to specify days, broker id, event id, event keyword or past tickets full metadata")
parser.print_help()
sys.exit()
elif req_arg != 1:
print("More than one option specified. Need to specify only one required option")
parser.print_help()
sys.exit()
# Processing logic here ...
Cheers!
I like to keep things as simple as possible, this works great:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
Description = """Tool description"""
Epilog = """toolname.py -a aflag -b bflag with these combined it does blah"""
arg_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
description=Description,
epilog=Epilog,
)
try:
if len(sys.argv) == 1:
arg_parser.print_help()
except Exception as e:
print(e)
This is how I start all my tools as its always good to include some examples
When call add_subparsers method save the first positional argument to dest= and check value after argparse has been initialized, like this:
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(dest='command')
And just check this this variable:
if not args.command:
parser.print_help()
parser.exit(1) # If exit() - exit code will be zero (no error)
Full example:
#!/usr/bin/env python
""" doc """
import argparse
import sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description=__doc__)
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(dest='command',
help='List of commands')
list_parser = subparsers.add_parser('list',
help='List contents')
list_parser.add_argument('dir', action='store',
help='Directory to list')
create_parser = subparsers.add_parser('create',
help='Create a directory')
create_parser.add_argument('dirname', action='store',
help='New directory to create')
create_parser.add_argument('--read-only', default=False, action='store_true',
help='Set permissions to prevent writing to the directory')
args = parser.parse_args()
if not args.command:
parser.print_help()
parser.exit(1)
print(vars(args)) # For debug
This approach is a lot more elegant than most others. Instead of overriding error(), you can control the behaviour a lot more precisely by wrapping the parse_args() method:
import sys
import argparse
HelpFlags = ('help', '--help', '-h', '/h', '?', '/?', )
class ArgParser (argparse.ArgumentParser):
def __init__(self, *args, **kws):
super().__init__(*args, **kws)
def parse_args(self, args=None, namespace=None):
if args is None:
args = sys.argv[1:]
if len(args) < 1 or (args[0].lower() in HelpFlags):
self.print_help(sys.stderr)
sys.exit()
return super().parse_args(args, namespace)
Set your positional arguments with nargs, and check if positional args are empty.
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('file', nargs='?')
args = parser.parse_args()
if not args.file:
parser.print_help()
Reference Python nargs
If your command is something where a user needs to choose some action, then use a mutually exclusive group with required=True.
This is kind of an extension to the answer given by pd321.
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
group = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group(required=True)
group.add_argument("--batch", action='store', type=int, metavar='pay_id')
group.add_argument("--list", action='store_true')
group.add_argument("--all", action='store_true', help='check all payments')
args=parser.parse_args()
if args.batch:
print('batch {}'.format(args.batch))
if args.list:
print('list')
if args.all:
print('all')
Output:
$ python3 a_test.py
usage: a_test.py [-h] (--batch pay_id | --list | --all)
a_test.py: error: one of the arguments --batch --list --all is required
This only give the basic help. And some of the other answers will give you the full help. But at least your users know they can do -h
This isn't good (also, because intercepts all errors), but:
def _error(parser):
def wrapper(interceptor):
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(-1)
return wrapper
def _args_get(args=sys.argv[1:]):
parser = argparser.ArgumentParser()
parser.error = _error(parser)
parser.add_argument(...)
...
Here is definition of the error function of the ArgumentParser class.
As you see, the following signature takes two arguments. However, functions outside the class know nothing about first argument self, because, roughly speaking, this argument is for the class.
def _error(self, message):
self.print_help()
sys.exit(-1)
def _args_get(args=sys.argv[1:]):
parser = argparser.ArgumentParser()
parser.error = _error
...
will output:
"AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'print_help'"
You can pass parser (self) in _error function, by calling it:
def _error(self, message):
self.print_help()
sys.exit(-1)
def _args_get(args=sys.argv[1:]):
parser = argparser.ArgumentParser()
parser.error = _error(parser)
...
But if you don't want exit the program right now, return it:
def _error(parser):
def wrapper():
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(-1)
return wrapper
Nonetheless, parser doesn't know that it has been modified. Thus, when an error occurs, it will print the cause of it (by the way, it's a localized translation). So intercept it:
def _error(parser):
def wrapper(interceptor):
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(-1)
return wrapper
Now, when an error occurs, parser will print the cause of it, and you'll intercept it, look at it, and... throw out.