If I populate an exclusively mutual argparse group and then parser.add_argument (for other items) the usage shows the arguments within the exclusively mutual group as mutually exclusive:
import argparse
parser1 = argparse.ArgumentParser()
group1 = parser1.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
group1.add_argument('--start')
group1.add_argument('--stop')
group1.add_argument('--restart')
parser1.add_argument('--os')
parser1.print_usage()
Output:
usage: arg_usage.py [-h] [--start START | --stop STOP | --restart RESTART] [--os OS]
However if I add a non-mutually exclusive argument to the parser in the middle of the group the usage output no longer reflects the fact that some of the arguments are mutually exclusive:
import argparse
parser2 = argparse.ArgumentParser()
group2 = parser2.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
group2.add_argument('--start')
group2.add_argument('--stop')
parser2.add_argument('--os')
group2.add_argument('--restart')
parser2.print_usage()
Output:
usage: arg_usage.py [-h] [--start START] [--stop STOP] [--os OS]
[--restart RESTART]
Is there any way to work around this without manually supplying the usage string or re-ordering the calls?
Additional note - I've found the same issue occurs (usage doesn't indicate mutually exclusive options) when adding mixed types to a mutually exclusive group (positional & optional).
Additional ?: Are these bugs that should be submitted to http://bugs.python.org/ ?