vote up 4 vote down star

What is the "cleanest" way to implement an command-line UI, similar to git's, for example:

git push origin/master
git remote add origin git://example.com master

Ideally also allowing the more flexible parsing, for example,

jump_to_folder app theappname v2
jump_to_folder app theappname source
jump_to_folder app theappname source v2
jump_to_folder app theappname build v1
jump_to_folder app theappname build 1
jump_to_folder app theappname v2 build

jump_to_folder is the scripts name, app is the command, theappname is a "fixed-location" parameter, "build" and "v2" etc are arguments (For example, possible arguments would be any number/any number prefixed with a v, or build/source/tmp/config)

I could just manually parse the arguments with a series of if/else/elifs, but there must be a more elegant way to do this?

As an entirely theoretically example, I could describe the UI schema..

app:
    fixed: application_name

    optional params:
        arg subsection:
            "build"
            "source"
            "tmp"
            "config"

        arg version:
            integer
            "v" + integer

Then parse the supplied arguments though the above schema, and get a dictionary:

>>> print schema.parse(["app", "theappname", "v1", "source"])
{
    "application_name": "theappname",
    "params":{
        "subsection": "source",
        "version":"v1"
    }
}

Does such a system exist? If not, how would I go about implementing something along these lines?

flag

4 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Straight from one of my scripts:

import sys

def prog1_func1_act1(): print "pfa1"
def prog2_func2_act2(): print "pfa2"

commands = {
    "prog1 func1 act1": prog1_func1_act1,
    "prog2 func2 act2": prog2_func2_act2
}

try:
    commands[" ".join(sys.argv[1:])]()
except KeyError:
    print "Usage: ", commands.keys()

It's a pretty quick and dirty solution, but works great for my usage. If I were to clean it up a bit, I would probably add argparse to the mix for parsing positional and keyword arguments.

link|flag
The problem with this is the arguments are fixed.. For example, you couldn't easily have a "v001".."v102" option, short of creating a key for every combination.. – dbr Dec 12 '08 at 11:34
Yes I know, and that's why I mentioned argparse. For example, if you have relatively few "commands" and "actions", but a lot of parameters, you can dispatch to specific action with the approach I use, and then pass parameters (and optional keyword arguments) to your script that uses argparse. – Mosor Dec 12 '08 at 11:40
plus, you can add a meta-command 'help' that prints out the contents of commands and shows their .__doc__ strings – pjz Dec 12 '08 at 14:52
also, the args aren't really fixed because the commands in the command list take all the args, so they can be parse in each command (and common parsings can be factored out). Or, if you mean that the command list is limited, consider overriding getkey in a commands object. – pjz Dec 12 '08 at 14:54
vote up 5 vote down

The cmd module would probably work well for this.

Example:

import cmd

class Calc(cmd.Cmd):
    def do_add(self, arg):
        print sum(map(int, arg.split()))

if __name__ == '__main__':
    Calc().cmdloop()

Run it:

$python calc.py
(Cmd) add 4 5
9
(Cmd) help

Undocumented commands:
======================
add  help

(Cmd)

See the Python docs or PyMOTW site for more info.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Python has a module for parsing command line options, optparse.

link|flag
Unfortunatly it parses command line options, not arguments as dbr asks – Piotr Lesnicki Dec 12 '08 at 11:10
Exactly. It's best suited for "-f 2 -v -z 55" type arguments, as far as I can tell, unless I am missing something? – dbr Dec 12 '08 at 11:32
vote up 0 vote down

Here's my suggestion.

  1. Change your grammar slightly.

  2. Use optparse.

Ideally also allowing the more flexible parsing, for example,

jump_to_folder -n theappname -v2 cmd 
jump_to_folder -n theappname cmd source 
jump_to_folder -n theappname -v2 cmd source 
jump_to_folder -n theappname -v1 cmd build 
jump_to_folder -n theappname -1 cmd build 
jump_to_folder -n theappname -v2 cmd build

Then you have 1 or 2 args: the command is always the first arg. It's optional argument is always the second arg.

Everything else is options, in no particular order.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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