This is a bit fragile since it relies on understanding the internals of argparse.ArgumentParser, but in lieu of rewriting argparse.ArgumentParser.parse_known_args, here's what I use:
class OrderedNamespace(argparse.Namespace):
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
self.__dict__["_arg_order"] = []
self.__dict__["_arg_order_first_time_through"] = True
argparse.Namespace.__init__(self, **kwargs)
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
#print("Setting %s -> %s" % (name, value))
self.__dict__[name] = value
if name in self._arg_order and hasattr(self, "_arg_order_first_time_through"):
self.__dict__["_arg_order"] = []
delattr(self, "_arg_order_first_time_through")
self.__dict__["_arg_order"].append(name)
def _finalize(self):
if hasattr(self, "_arg_order_first_time_through"):
self.__dict__["_arg_order"] = []
delattr(self, "_arg_order_first_time_through")
def _latest_of(self, k1, k2):
try:
print self._arg_order
if self._arg_order.index(k1) > self._arg_order.index(k2):
return k1
except ValueError:
if k1 in self._arg_order:
return k1
return k2
This works through the knowledge that argparse.ArgumentParser.parse_known_args runs through the entire option list once setting default values for each argument. Meaning that user specified arguments begin the first time setattr hits an argument that it's seen before.
Usage:
options, extra_args = parser.parse_known_args(sys.argv, namespace=OrderedNamespace())
You can check options._arg_order for the order of user specified command line args, or use options._latest_of("arg1", "arg2") to see which of --arg1 or --arg2 was specified later on the command line (which, for my purposes was what I needed: seeing which of two options would be the overriding one).
UPDATE: had to add _finalize method to handle pathological case of sys.argv() not containing any arguments in the list)