I am using the argparse package of Python 2.7 to write some option-parsing logic for a command-line tool. The tool should accept one of the following arguments:
"ON": Turn a function on.
"OFF": Turn a function off.
[No arguments provided]: Echo the current state of the function.
Looking at the argparse documentation led me to believe that I wanted two--possibly three--subcommands to be defined, since these three states are mutually exclusive and represent different conceptual activities. This is my current attempt at the code:
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers()
parser.set_defaults(func=print_state) # I think this line is wrong.
parser_on = subparsers.add_parser('ON')
parser_on.set_defaults(func=set_state, newstate='ON')
parser_off = subparsers.add_parser('OFF')
parser_off.set_defaults(func=set_state, newstate='OFF')
args = parser.parse_args()
if(args.func == set_state):
set_state(args.newstate)
elif(args.func == print_state):
print_state()
else:
args.func() # Catchall in case I add more functions later
I was under the impression that if I provided 0 arguments, the main parser would set func=print_state, and if I provided 1 argument, the main parser would use the appropriate subcommand's defaults and call func=set_state. Instead, I get the following error with 0 arguments:
usage: cvsSecure.py [-h] {ON,OFF} ...
cvsSecure.py: error: too few arguments
And if I provide "OFF" or "ON", print_state gets called instead of set_state. If I comment out the parser.set_defaults line, set_state is called correctly.
I'm a journeyman-level programmer, but a rank beginner to Python. Any suggestions about how I can get this working?
Edit: Another reason I was looking at subcommands was a potential fourth function that I am considering for the future:
"FORCE txtval": Set the function's state to txtval.