6

I'm using the optparse module for option/argument parsing. For backwards compatibility reasons, I can't use the argparse module. How can I format my epilog message so that newlines are preserved?

In the below example, I'd like the epilog to be printed as formatted.

    epi = \
"""
Examples usages:
  Do something
  %prog -a -b foo
  Do something else
  %prog -d -f -h bar
"""
    parser = optparse.OptionParser(epilog=epi)
3
  • Just as a side note. Why can't you use argparse? its far superior May 11, 2011 at 8:32
  • 1
    Jakob, is there a way that I could use argparse when I'm using python 2.6 and want to share it with people who may or may not be using python 2.7+?
    – DannyTree
    May 11, 2011 at 8:55
  • pypi.python.org/pypi/argparse/1.2.1 Just include it locally ^^ May 11, 2011 at 9:08

3 Answers 3

8

See the first answer at:

python optparse, how to include additional info in usage output?

The basic answer is to subclass the OptionParser

class MyParser(optparse.OptionParser):
    def format_epilog(self, formatter):
        return self.epilog
2
  • How can you instead modify the help messages associated with the options? Then this answer doesn't work, since it only changes the formatting of the epilog. Jan 29, 2014 at 14:27
  • There's a format_help() method that can be overridden, as well.
    – user227667
    Jan 30, 2014 at 19:09
1

You could decorate the optparse.HelpFormatter.format_description function:

from optparse import HelpFormatter as fmt
def decorate(fn):
    def wrapped(self=None, desc=""):
        return '\n'.join( [ fn(self, s).rstrip() for s in desc.split('\n') ] )
    return wrapped
fmt.format_description = decorate(fmt.format_description)

Thus, you can have a help description that does things like this:

my_desc = """This is some text
that wraps to some more stuff.\n
\n
And this is a new paragraph.\n
\n
This line comes before\n
this line but not in a different paragraph."""

Works for me. :)

1

For those of you who are using user227667's answer but want to replace %prog in the epilog, you may use:

class MyParser(optparse.OptionParser):
    def format_epilog(self, formatter):
        return self.expand_prog_name(self.epilog)

But in general, if possible, do not use optparse.

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