Why won't argparse parse these arguments?

--foo 1 2 3 bar

Using

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--foo', nargs='+')                  
parser.add_argument('bar')

which gives the following error:

error: too few arguments

If I pass the bar argument first though, it works:

bar --foo 1 2 3   

Now, this in itself is not too bad. I can live with having the positional arguments first it's just that this behaviour is inconsistent with the help argparse creates for us, which states that bar should be last:

usage: argparsetest.py [-h] [--foo FOO [FOO ...]] bar

So how do you make this work with consistent help text?

Here's a complete test program.

link|improve this question

feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Maybe try doing --input --output flags and setting those options to required=True in the add_argument?

http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#the-add-argument-method

link|improve this answer
Thanks, that works and gives me consistent help text. The only drawback is the extra --input flag part but I can live with that. Cheers – Reimund May 2 '11 at 8:55
To clear things up, the suggested solution is to use parser.add_argument('--bar', required=True). One can then pass the following arguments: --foo 1 2 3 --bar bar – Reimund May 2 '11 at 11:15
feedback

nargs='+' tells argparse to gather all remaining args together, so bar is included. It has no magical way to guess you intend bar to be a meaningful argument by itself and not part of the args taken to --foo.

The example in the docs refers to a simple --foo argument, not one with nargs='+'. Be sure to understand the difference.

link|improve this answer
It would be easy to implement it so that the last n arguments are treated as the n mandatory positional arguments. It's not magic, I guess it's just a design decision. – Reimund May 2 '11 at 8:54
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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