I'd like to have an argument to my program that has some required parameters along with some optional parameters. Something like this:

[--print text [color [size]]

so you could pass it any of these:

mycommand --print hello
mycommand --print hello blue
mycommand --print hello red 12

There could be multiple of these so it has to be a single add_argument. For example:

[--print text [color]] [--output filename [overwrite]]

I can achieve arguments that are close to what I want:

>>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
>>> act = parser.add_argument('--foo', nargs=3, metavar=('x','y','z'))
>>> act = parser.add_argument('--bar', nargs='?')
>>> act = parser.add_argument('--baz', nargs='*')
>>> parser.print_help()
usage: [-h] [--foo x y z] [--bar [BAR]] [--baz [BAZ [BAZ ...]]]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --foo x y z
  --bar [BAR]
  --baz [BAZ [BAZ ...]]

but not quite. Is there any way to do this with argparse? I know I could make them all nargs="*" but then --help would not list the names of the optional arguments. If I pass nargs="*" and a tuple for metavar, argparse throws an exception.

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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Reading the source code (start in take_action), I believe what you want is impossible. All argument parsing and passing to actions is done based on nargs, and nargs is either a number, OPTIONAL ("?"), ZERO_OR_MORE ("*"), ONE_OR_MORE ("+"), PARSER, or REMAINDER. This must be determined before the Action object (which handles the input) even sees what it's getting, so it can't dynamically figure out nargs.

I think you'll need to live with a workaround. I would maybe have --foo-x x, --foo-y y, and --foo-z z, and perhaps also --foo x y z.

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Thanks. That's too bad. – jterrace Mar 11 '11 at 3:44
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How about

def printText(args):
  print args

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
subparser = parser.add_subparsers()
printer = subparser.add_parser('print')
printer.add_argument('text')
printer.add_argument('color', nargs='?')
printer.add_argument('size', type=int, nargs='?')
printer.set_defaults(func=printText)

cmd = parser.parse_args()
cmd.func(cmd)

Then you get something like this:

$ ./test.py -h
usage: test.py [-h] {print} ...

positional arguments:
  {print}

$ ./test.py print -h
usage: test.py print [-h] text [color] [size]

positional arguments:
  text
  color
  size

$ ./test.py print text
Namespace(color=None, func=<function printText at 0x2a96150b90>, size=None, text='text')

$ ./test.py print text red
Namespace(color='red', func=<function printText at 0x2a96150b90>, size=None, text='text')

$ ./test.py print text red 12
Namespace(color='red', func=<function printText at 0x2a96150b90>, size=12, text='text')
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Btw I realize this is 9 months late, and probably no longer required by the poster, but just wanted to post an answer since I came up with one, for completeness. xkcd.com/979 – CNeo Dec 14 '11 at 10:42
But you can only specify one subparser at once, do this won't work for multiple. – jterrace Dec 14 '11 at 15:07
Can you give an example for multiple? My example comes down to optional positional arguments, both being nargs='?', so depending on what you need to do, it could be accomplished without subparsers. or multiple subparsers.. :) – CNeo Dec 16 '11 at 15:36
I have the example in my OP: mycommand --print hello red 12 --output filename overwrite – jterrace Dec 16 '11 at 16:55
Apologies, I should probably have read the question more clearly.. You can simulate what you're after with the nargs='+' or nargs='*', which is already as close as you came. metavar can indeed take a tuple, but can only define two names (not three). Also you could overwrite help, for something like parser.add_argument('--print', nargs='+', metavar=('text', 'color'), help='--print text [color [size]]') – CNeo Dec 19 '11 at 13:51
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