0

I'm trying to use docopt so a user can do an input like:

python3 -p argum1 -d argum2 [-u arg_facul]

the arguments argum1 and argum must not be positional; the first two arguments are required and the third is optional.

I already have this:

""" 
Usage:
         pyprogram.py    (-p PASS | --pass=PASS) (-d DICT | --dict=DICT) [-u USER --user=USER]  

    Arguments:


    Options:
        -p              demand argument 1
        -d              demand argument 2 
        -u              may have this agrument or not
"""

The output is:

...$ python3 pyprogram.py -d dict.txt -p passwd.txt -u root 
{'--dict': None,  '--pass': None,  '-d': True,  '-p': True,  '-u': True,  'DICT': 'passwd.txt', 'PASS': 'dict.txt', 'USER': 'root'}

and I want the output to be:

... $ python3 pyprogram.py -d dict.txt -p passwd.txt -u root 
{'--dict': None,  '--pass': None,  '-d': True,  '-p': True,  '-u': True,  'DICT': 'dict.txt',  'PASS': 'passwd.txt', 'USER': 'root'}
4
  • Have you considered using argparse instead?
    – jonrsharpe
    May 13, 2015 at 10:06
  • i have to use docopt... and people tell me that docopt is mutch clean, less lines and easyer than argparse... May 13, 2015 at 10:08
  • The problem is that you imply and order here also. So that that the dict has to come after pass. That is why you don't get the order you want. May 13, 2015 at 19:36
  • so i can i do it so that i don't have tu put the args in order? May 14, 2015 at 21:31

1 Answer 1

0

I have foun out. Docopt is very piky concerning the space ant tabs.

so here is how it's going to be.

"""
Usage:
  passcrack_end.py -p <passw> -d <dic> [-u <user>]

Arguments:
  <passw>   ficheiro onde se encontram as passwords encriptadas - shadow
  <dic>     ficheiros com o dicionario das possiveis palavras passe 
  <user>    Utilizador para o qual quer encontrar a password

Option:
  -p pp     opção obrigatória
  -d dd     opção obrigatória
  -u uu     campo facultativo
"""

Watch out for the spaces. in the options the indentations is 2 spaces -d

if you call the program with this argumentes:

-d derivation -p panto -u ume

the output will be:

{
  "-d": "derivation", 
  "-p": "panto", 
  "-u": "ume"
}

if you call the program with this argumentes:

 -p panto -u ume -d derivation

the output will be the same:

{
  "-d": "derivation", 
  "-p": "panto", 
  "-u": "ume"
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.