1096

I would like to use argparse to parse boolean command-line arguments written as "--foo True" or "--foo False". For example:

my_program --my_boolean_flag False

However, the following test code does not do what I would like:

import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="My parser")
parser.add_argument("--my_bool", type=bool)
cmd_line = ["--my_bool", "False"]
parsed_args = parser.parse(cmd_line)

Sadly, parsed_args.my_bool evaluates to True. This is the case even when I change cmd_line to be ["--my_bool", ""], which is surprising, since bool("") evalutates to False.

How can I get argparse to parse "False", "F", and their lower-case variants to be False?

6
  • 88
    Here is a one-liner interpretation of @mgilson's answer parser.add_argument('--feature', dest='feature', default=False, action='store_true'). This solution will gurantee you always get a bool type with value True or False. (This solution has a constraint: your option must have a default value.) Apr 27, 2017 at 12:13
  • 28
    Here is a one-liner interpretation of @Maxim's answer parser.add_argument('--feature', dest='feature', type=lambda x:bool(distutils.util.strtobool(x))). When the option is used, this solution will ensure a bool type with value of True or False. When the option is not used you will get None. (distutils.util.strtobool(x) is from another stackoverflow question) Apr 27, 2017 at 12:33
  • 12
    how about something like parser.add_argument('--my_bool', action='store_true', default=False)
    – AruniRC
    Nov 1, 2017 at 19:11
  • 3
    For answer by @TrevorBoydSmith , try import with import distutils.util instead of import disutils. See this answer
    – Osama Dar
    Aug 12, 2021 at 12:49
  • 7
    Just ran into the same issue. It's astounding how unnecessarily big and overgrown the argparse module is, and still, it does not do simple things it's supposed to do out of the box. Even worse, it's doing them wrongly. Dec 23, 2021 at 16:50

28 Answers 28

1480

I think a more canonical way to do this is via:

command --feature

and

command --no-feature

argparse supports this version nicely:

Python 3.9+:

parser.add_argument('--feature', action=argparse.BooleanOptionalAction)

Python < 3.9:

parser.add_argument('--feature', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--no-feature', dest='feature', action='store_false')
parser.set_defaults(feature=True)

Of course, if you really want the --arg <True|False> version, you could pass ast.literal_eval as the "type", or a user defined function ...

def t_or_f(arg):
    ua = str(arg).upper()
    if 'TRUE'.startswith(ua):
       return True
    elif 'FALSE'.startswith(ua):
       return False
    else:
       pass  #error condition maybe?
41
  • 199
    I still think type=bool should work out of the box (consider positional arguments!). Even when you additionally specify choices=[False,True], you end up with both "False" and "True" considered True (due to a cast from string to bool?). Maybe related issue
    – dolphin
    Jul 20, 2013 at 1:03
  • 83
    Right, I just think there is no justification for this not working as expected. And this is extremely misleading, as there are no safety checks nor error messages.
    – dolphin
    Aug 6, 2013 at 12:30
  • 138
    @mgilson -- What I find misleading is that you can set type=bool, you get no error message, and yet, for both "False" and "True" string arguments, you get True in your supposedly boolean variable (due to how type casting works in python). So either type=bool should be clearly unsupported (emit some warning, error, etc.), or it should work in a way that is useful and intuitively expected.
    – dolphin
    Sep 8, 2013 at 21:51
  • 21
    @dolphin -- respectively, I disagree. I think that the behavior is exactly the way it should be and is consistent with the zen of python "Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules". However, if you feel this strongly about it, why not bring it up on one of the various python mailing lists? There, you might have a chance at convincing someone who has the power to do something about this issue. Even if you were able to convince me, you will have only succeeded in convincing me and the behavior still won't change since I'm not a dev:)
    – mgilson
    Sep 9, 2013 at 16:01
  • 25
    Are we arguing about what the Python bool() function should do, or what argparse should accept in type=fn? All argparse checks is that fn is callable. It expects fn to take one string argument, and return a value. The behavior of fn is the programer's responsibility, not argparse's.
    – hpaulj
    Oct 7, 2013 at 17:09
505

Yet another solution using the previous suggestions, but with the "correct" parse error from argparse:

def str2bool(v):
    if isinstance(v, bool):
        return v
    if v.lower() in ('yes', 'true', 't', 'y', '1'):
        return True
    elif v.lower() in ('no', 'false', 'f', 'n', '0'):
        return False
    else:
        raise argparse.ArgumentTypeError('Boolean value expected.')

This is very useful to make switches with default values; for instance

parser.add_argument("--nice", type=str2bool, nargs='?',
                        const=True, default=False,
                        help="Activate nice mode.")

allows me to use:

script --nice
script --nice <bool>

and still use a default value (specific to the user settings). One (indirectly related) downside with that approach is that the 'nargs' might catch a positional argument -- see this related question and this argparse bug report.

14
  • 10
    nargs='?' means zero or one argument. docs.python.org/3/library/argparse.html#nargs
    – Maxim
    Aug 3, 2017 at 12:05
  • 1
    I love this, but my equivalent of default=NICE is giving me an error, so I must need to do something else. Sep 15, 2017 at 23:42
  • 2
    @MarcelloRomani str2bool is not a type in the Python sense, it is the function defined above, you need to include it somewhere.
    – Maxim
    Jan 30, 2018 at 10:48
  • 22
    the code of str2bool(v) could be replaced with bool(distutils.util.strtobool(v)). Source: stackoverflow.com/a/18472142/2436175
    – Antonio
    Aug 17, 2018 at 0:30
  • 4
    Maybe it is worth mentioning that with this way you cannot check if argument is set with if args.nice: beacuse if the argument is set to False, it will never pass the condition. If this is right then maybe it is better to return list from str2bool function and set list as const parameter, like this [True], [False]. Correct me if I am wrong
    – NutCracker
    Aug 23, 2018 at 10:59
386

If you want to allow --feature and --no-feature at the same time (last one wins)

This allows users to make a shell alias with --feature, and overriding it with --no-feature.

Python 3.9 and above

parser.add_argument('--feature', default=True, action=argparse.BooleanOptionalAction)

Python 3.8 and below

I recommend mgilson's answer:

parser.add_argument('--feature', dest='feature', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--no-feature', dest='feature', action='store_false')
parser.set_defaults(feature=True)

If you DON'T want to allow --feature and --no-feature at the same time

You can use a mutually exclusive group:

feature_parser = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group(required=False)
feature_parser.add_argument('--feature', dest='feature', action='store_true')
feature_parser.add_argument('--no-feature', dest='feature', action='store_false')
parser.set_defaults(feature=True)

You can use this helper if you are going to set many of them:

def add_bool_arg(parser, name, default=False):
    group = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group(required=False)
    group.add_argument('--' + name, dest=name, action='store_true')
    group.add_argument('--no-' + name, dest=name, action='store_false')
    parser.set_defaults(**{name:default})

add_bool_arg(parser, 'useful-feature')
add_bool_arg(parser, 'even-more-useful-feature')
11
  • 5
    @CharlieParker add_argument is called with dest='feature'. set_defaults is called with feature=True. Understand?
    – fnkr
    Sep 14, 2016 at 12:15
  • 5
    This or mgilson's answer should have been the accepted answer - even though the OP wanted --flag False, part of SO answers should be about WHAT they're trying to solve, not just about HOW. There should be absolutely no reason to do --flag False or --other-flag True and then use some custom parser to convert the string to a boolean.. action='store_true' and action='store_false' are the best ways to use boolean flags
    – kevlarr
    Mar 20, 2018 at 14:23
  • 6
    @cowlinator Why is SO ultimately about answering "questions as stated"? According to its own guidelines, an anwer ... can be “don’t do that”, but it should also include “try this instead” which (at least to me) implies answers should go deeper when appropriate. There are definitely times when some of us posting questions can benefit from guidance on better/best practices, etc.. Answering "as stated" often doesn't do that. That being said, your frustration with answers often assuming too much (or incorrectly) is completely valid.
    – kevlarr
    Apr 4, 2018 at 2:45
  • 3
    If one wants to have a third value for when the user has not specified feature explicitly, he needs to replace the last line with the parser.set_defaults(feature=None)
    – Alex Che
    Sep 24, 2018 at 15:02
  • 3
    If we want to add a help= entry for this argument, where should it go? In the add_mutually_exclusive_group() call? In one or both of the add_argument() calls? Somewhere else? Dec 26, 2018 at 18:49
131

Here is another variation without extra row/s to set default values. The boolean value is always assigned, so that it can be used in logical statements without checking beforehand:

import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Parse bool")
parser.add_argument("--do-something", default=False, action="store_true",
                    help="Flag to do something")
args = parser.parse_args()

if args.do_something:
     print("Do something")
else:
     print("Don't do something")

print(f"Check that args.do_something={args.do_something} is always a bool.")
7
  • 11
    This answer is underrated, but wonderful in its simplicity. Don't try to set required=True or else you'll always get a True arg.
    – Garren S
    Aug 28, 2018 at 22:01
  • 1
    Please NEVER use equality operator on things like bool or nonetype. You should use IS instead Mar 28, 2019 at 14:19
  • 8
    This is a better answer than the accepted because it simply checks for the presence of the flag to set the boolean value, instead of requiring redundant boolean string. (Yo dawg, I heard you like booleans... so I gave you a boolean with your boolean to set your boolean!)
    – Siphon
    May 8, 2019 at 18:42
  • 9
    Hmm... the question, as stated, seems to want to use "True"/"False" on the command line itself; however with this example, python3 test.py --do-something False fails with error: unrecognized arguments: False, so it does not really answer the question.
    – sdbbs
    Nov 26, 2019 at 10:04
  • A trivial note: the default default of None will generally work fine here as well. Dec 25, 2020 at 1:52
92

oneliner:

parser.add_argument('--is_debug', default=False, type=lambda x: (str(x).lower() == 'true'))
4
  • 21
    good for oneliner fan, also it could be improved a bit: type=lambda x: (str(x).lower() in ['true','1', 'yes'])
    – Tu Bui
    Jan 23, 2019 at 13:55
  • 9
    Another option is to use the standard distutils.utils.strtobool, eg type=lambda x: bool(strtobool(str(x))) . True values are y, yes, t, true, on and 1; false values are n, no, f, false, off and 0.
    – Jethro
    Oct 8, 2020 at 10:18
  • 2
    Small correction @Jethro's comment: This should be distutils.util.strtobool (no s). Works great! Aug 4, 2022 at 16:04
  • strtobool is a bit annoying (especially in this context) in that it doesn't strip whitespace. So you need to do lambda x: strtobool(x.strip()). Otherwise you will crash on things like "false\r" if you have a new line in a bash script.
    – grofte
    Oct 10, 2022 at 8:34
41

There seems to be some confusion as to what type=bool and type='bool' might mean. Should one (or both) mean 'run the function bool(), or 'return a boolean'? As it stands type='bool' means nothing. add_argument gives a 'bool' is not callable error, same as if you used type='foobar', or type='int'.

But argparse does have registry that lets you define keywords like this. It is mostly used for action, e.g. `action='store_true'. You can see the registered keywords with:

parser._registries

which displays a dictionary

{'action': {None: argparse._StoreAction,
  'append': argparse._AppendAction,
  'append_const': argparse._AppendConstAction,
...
 'type': {None: <function argparse.identity>}}

There are lots of actions defined, but only one type, the default one, argparse.identity.

This code defines a 'bool' keyword:

def str2bool(v):
  #susendberg's function
  return v.lower() in ("yes", "true", "t", "1")
p = argparse.ArgumentParser()
p.register('type','bool',str2bool) # add type keyword to registries
p.add_argument('-b',type='bool')  # do not use 'type=bool'
# p.add_argument('-b',type=str2bool) # works just as well
p.parse_args('-b false'.split())
Namespace(b=False)

parser.register() is not documented, but also not hidden. For the most part the programmer does not need to know about it because type and action take function and class values. There are lots of stackoverflow examples of defining custom values for both.


In case it isn't obvious from the previous discussion, bool() does not mean 'parse a string'. From the Python documentation:

bool(x): Convert a value to a Boolean, using the standard truth testing procedure.

Contrast this with

int(x): Convert a number or string x to an integer.

1
  • 3
    Or use: parser.register('type', 'bool', (lambda x: x.lower() in ("yes", "true", "t", "1")))
    – Matyas
    May 12, 2016 at 1:15
40

Simplest & most correct way is:

from distutils.util import strtobool

parser.add_argument('--feature', dest='feature', 
                    type=lambda x: bool(strtobool(x)))

Do note that True values are y, yes, t, true, on and 1; false values are n, no, f, false, off and 0. Raises ValueError if val is anything else.

1
  • 1
    This should be so much higher up! :-)
    – Eike P.
    Feb 12, 2022 at 12:50
31

A quite similar way is to use:

feature.add_argument('--feature',action='store_true')

and if you set the argument --feature in your command

 command --feature

the argument will be True, if you do not set type --feature the arguments default is always False!

2
  • 1
    Is there some drawback to this method that the other answers overcome? This seems to be by far the easiest, most succinct solution that gets to what the OP (and in this case me) wanted. I love it. Jun 30, 2019 at 21:28
  • 5
    While simple, it does not answer the question. OP want an argument where you can specify --feature False
    – Astariul
    Nov 28, 2019 at 8:33
21

I was looking for the same issue, and imho the pretty solution is :

def str2bool(v):
  return v.lower() in ("yes", "true", "t", "1")

and using that to parse the string to boolean as suggested above.

3
  • 8
    If you're going to go this route, might I suggest distutils.util.strtobool(v).
    – CivFan
    Aug 15, 2017 at 16:31
  • 2
    The distutils.util.strtobool returns 1 or 0, not an actual boolean. Apr 16, 2019 at 2:12
  • If you want a boolean from strtobool you could do lambda x: bool(strtobool(x.strip()). I would suggest that you at the very least extend this function so it only returns False when v.lower() in ("no", "false", "f", "0") and an error otherwise.
    – grofte
    Oct 10, 2022 at 8:43
15

This works for everything I expect it to:

add_boolean_argument(parser, 'foo', default=True)
parser.parse_args([])                   # Whatever the default was
parser.parse_args(['--foo'])            # True
parser.parse_args(['--nofoo'])          # False
parser.parse_args(['--foo=true'])       # True
parser.parse_args(['--foo=false'])      # False
parser.parse_args(['--foo', '--nofoo']) # Error

The code:

def _str_to_bool(s):
    """Convert string to bool (in argparse context)."""
    if s.lower() not in ['true', 'false']:
        raise ValueError('Need bool; got %r' % s)
    return {'true': True, 'false': False}[s.lower()]

def add_boolean_argument(parser, name, default=False):                                                                                               
    """Add a boolean argument to an ArgumentParser instance."""
    group = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
    group.add_argument(
        '--' + name, nargs='?', default=default, const=True, type=_str_to_bool)
    group.add_argument('--no' + name, dest=name, action='store_false')
1
  • Excellent! I'm going with this answer. I tweaked my _str_to_bool(s) to convert s = s.lower() once, then test if s not in {'true', 'false', '1', '0'}, and finally return s in {'true', '1'}.
    – Jerry101
    Aug 1, 2018 at 9:49
15

Simplest. It's not flexible, but I prefer simplicity.

  parser.add_argument('--boolean_flag',
                      help='This is a boolean flag.',
                      type=eval, 
                      choices=[True, False], 
                      default='True')

EDIT: If you don't trust the input, don't use eval.

7
  • This does seem quite convenient. I noticed you have eval as the type. I had a question about this: how should eval be defined, or is there an import required in order to make use of it?
    – edesz
    Apr 28, 2020 at 0:49
  • 1
    eval is a built-in function. docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#eval This can be any unary function which other, more flexible approaches take advantage.
    – Russell
    Apr 29, 2020 at 1:08
  • 3
    that's cute, but quite risky to just put out into the wild where users who aren't aware of eval being evil will just copy-paste it into their scripts.
    – Arne
    Jun 8, 2020 at 15:07
  • 1
    @Arne, good point. Although, it appears that it would be pretty difficult for a well-intentioned user to accidentally do something pernicious.
    – Russell
    Jun 8, 2020 at 17:08
  • 1
    Do not use. Not only unsafe, the top answers are much more idiomatic. If you still want to go this route, a popular answer already mentioned: ast.literal_eval which is safer. Dec 25, 2020 at 2:00
13

In addition to what @mgilson said, it should be noted that there's also a ArgumentParser.add_mutually_exclusive_group(required=False) method that would make it trivial to enforce that --flag and --no-flag aren't used at the same time.

0
11

This is actually outdated. For Python 3.7+, Argparse now supports boolean args (search BooleanOptionalAction).

The implementation looks like this:

import argparse

ap = argparse.ArgumentParser()

# List of args
ap.add_argument('--foo', default=True, type=bool, help='Some helpful text that is not bar. Default = True')

# Importable object
args = ap.parse_args()

One other thing to mention: this will block all entries other than True and False for the argument via argparse.ArgumentTypeError. You can create a custom error class for this if you want to try to change this for any reason.

7
  • You are mentioning this working in 3.7+ and 3.9+. Which one is it? Aug 23, 2021 at 14:19
  • 3.7+. Clarified in an edit
    – Zach Rieck
    Nov 5, 2021 at 17:50
  • 1
    The python documentation mentions New in version 3.9 and I cannot import BooleanOptionalAction from argparse in 3.7... Nov 26, 2021 at 17:27
  • 9
    NO. That is not how action=argparse.BooleanOptionalAction works. Earlier under type, it warns against using the type=bool, "The bool() function is not recommended as a type converter. All it does is convert empty strings to False and non-empty strings to True. This is usually not what is desired.".
    – hpaulj
    Jan 8, 2022 at 7:44
  • 8
    Agreed, this answer should not be accepted: args = ap.parse_args(['--foo', 'False']) returns True (and in my opinion it shouldn't
    – Jblasco
    Mar 22, 2022 at 11:19
10

A simpler way would be to use as below.

parser.add_argument('--feature', type=lambda s: s.lower() in ['true', 't', 'yes', '1'])
6

After previously following @akash-desarda 's excellence answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/59579733/315112 , to use strtobool via lambda, later, I decide to use strtobool directly instead.

import argparse
from distutils import util
parser.add_argument('--feature', type=util.strtobool)

Yes you're right, strtobool is returning an int, not a bool. But strtobool will not returning any other value except 0 and 1, and python will get them converted to a bool value seamlessy and consistently.

>>> 0 == False
True
>>> 0 == True
False
>>> 1 == False
False
>>> 1 == True
True

While on receiving a wrong input value like

python yours.py --feature wrong_value

An argparse.Action with strtobool compared to lambda will produce a slightly clearer/comprehensible error message:

yours.py: error: argument --feature: invalid strtobool value: 'wrong_value'

Compared to this code,

parser.add_argument('--feature', type=lambda x: bool(util.strtobool(x))

Which will produce a less clear error message:

yours.py: error: argument --feature: invalid <lambda> value: 'wrong_value'
4

Simplest way would be to use choices:

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--my-flag',choices=('True','False'))

args = parser.parse_args()
flag = args.my_flag == 'True'
print(flag)

Not passing --my-flag evaluates to False. The required=True option could be added if you always want the user to explicitly specify a choice.

4

Expanding on gerardw's answer

The reason parser.add_argument("--my_bool", type=bool) doesn't work is that bool("mystring") is True for any non-empty string so bool("False") is actually True.

What you want is

my_program.py

import argparse

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="My parser")

parser.add_argument(
        "--my_bool",
        choices=["False", "True"],
        )

parsed_args = parser.parse_args()

my_bool = parsed_args.my_bool == "True"

print(my_bool)
$ python my_program.py --my_bool False
False

$ python my_program.py --my_bool True
True

$ python my_program.py --my_bool true
usage: my_program.py [-h] [--my_bool {False,True}]
my_program.py: error: argument --my_bool: invalid choice: 'true' (choose from 'False', 'True')
4

Actually, very easy. No packages need to be imported.

Remember that type=func means returning the func(x), like type=bool -> bool(x), so:

parser.add_argument('--feature', default=False, type=lambda x: x == 'True')

Now that we have known the principle, you can also extend it to type=lambda x: x.lower() not in ['false', 'no', '0', 'none', ...].

3

As an improvement to @Akash Desarda 's answer, you could do

import argparse
from distutils.util import strtobool

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("--foo", 
    type=lambda x:bool(strtobool(x)),
    nargs='?', const=True, default=False)
args = parser.parse_args()
print(args.foo)

And it supports python test.py --foo

(base) [costa@costa-pc code]$ python test.py
False
(base) [costa@costa-pc code]$ python test.py --foo 
True
(base) [costa@costa-pc code]$ python test.py --foo True
True
(base) [costa@costa-pc code]$ python test.py --foo False
False
3

I found good way to store default value of parameter as False and when it is present in commandline argument then its value should be true.

cmd command when you want argument to be true: python main.py --csv

when you want your argument should be false: python main.py

import argparse
from ast import parse
import sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='')
parser.add_argument('--csv', action='store_true', default = False 
,help='read from csv')
args = parser.parse_args()

if args.csv:
    print('reading from csv')
1
  • 'store_true' already sets the default to False.
    – hpaulj
    Jun 27, 2022 at 15:17
2

I think the most canonical way will be:

parser.add_argument('--ensure', nargs='*', default=None)

ENSURE = config.ensure is None
1

Quick and easy, but only for arguments 0 or 1:

parser.add_argument("mybool", default=True,type=lambda x: bool(int(x)))
myargs=parser.parse_args()
print(myargs.mybool)

The output will be "False" after calling from terminal:

python myscript.py 0
1
  • This is the best method, 0 and 1 are easily interpretable as False and True. However, you should correct your first statement to say 0 will return false and any other value will return True. If you do want to restrict to 0,1 then add a choices as follows: parser.add_argument("mybool", default=True,type=lambda x: bool(int(x)), choices=['0','1'])
    – Akanni
    Jan 19, 2021 at 3:58
0
class FlagAction(argparse.Action):
    # From http://bugs.python.org/issue8538

    def __init__(self, option_strings, dest, default=None,
                 required=False, help=None, metavar=None,
                 positive_prefixes=['--'], negative_prefixes=['--no-']):
        self.positive_strings = set()
        self.negative_strings = set()
        for string in option_strings:
            assert re.match(r'--[A-z]+', string)
            suffix = string[2:]
            for positive_prefix in positive_prefixes:
                self.positive_strings.add(positive_prefix + suffix)
            for negative_prefix in negative_prefixes:
                self.negative_strings.add(negative_prefix + suffix)
        strings = list(self.positive_strings | self.negative_strings)
        super(FlagAction, self).__init__(option_strings=strings, dest=dest,
                                         nargs=0, const=None, default=default, type=bool, choices=None,
                                         required=required, help=help, metavar=metavar)

    def __call__(self, parser, namespace, values, option_string=None):
        if option_string in self.positive_strings:
            setattr(namespace, self.dest, True)
        else:
            setattr(namespace, self.dest, False)
0

Similar to @Akash but here is another approach that I've used. It uses str than lambda because python lambda always gives me an alien-feelings.

import argparse
from distutils.util import strtobool

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("--my_bool", type=str, default="False")
args = parser.parse_args()

if bool(strtobool(args.my_bool)) is True:
    print("OK")
0

just do the following , you can make --test = True by using

python filename --test

parser.add_argument("--test" , default=False ,help="test ?", dest='test', action='store_true')
1
0

Convert the value:

def __arg_to_bool__(arg):
    """__arg_to_bool__

        Convert string / int arg to bool
    :param arg: argument to be converted
    :type arg: str or int
    :return: converted arg
    :rtype: bool
    """
    str_true_values = (
        '1',
        'ENABLED',
        'ON',
        'TRUE',
        'YES',
    )
    str_false_values = (
        '0',
        'DISABLED',
        'OFF',
        'FALSE',
        'NO',
    )

    if isinstance(arg, str):
        arg = arg.upper()
        if arg in str_true_values:
            return True
        elif arg in str_false_values:
            return False

    if isinstance(arg, int):
        if arg == 1:
            return True
        elif arg == 0:
            return False

    if isinstance(arg, bool):
        return arg

    # if any other value not covered above, consider argument as False
    # or you could just raise and error
    return False

[...]


args = ap.parse_args()
my_arg = options.my_arg
my_arg = __arg_to_bool__(my_arg)

0

You can create a BoolAction and then use it

class BoolAction(Action):
    def __init__(
            self,
            option_strings,
            dest,
            nargs=None,
            default: bool = False,
            **kwargs,
    ):
        if nargs is not None:
            raise ValueError('nargs not allowed')
        super().__init__(option_strings, dest, default=default, **kwargs)

    def __call__(self, parser, namespace, values, option_string=None):
        input_value = values.lower()
        b = input_value in ['true', 'yes', '1']
        if not b and input_value not in ['false', 'no', '0']:
            raise ValueError('Invalid boolean value "%s".)
        setattr(namespace, self.dest, b)

and then set action=BoolAction in parser.add_argument()

1
  • This is great! I would just note that you also need to not set type=bool when you call add_argument, or it will just pass True to the BoolAction Mar 21, 2023 at 15:58
0
import argparse
if __name__=='__main__':
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument('--bool_flag', type=str)
    args = parser.parse_args()
    args.bool_flag = bool(eval(args.bool_flag))
    print(args.bool_flag, ',', type(args.bool_flag))

For the above python code saved as tmp.py:

python tmp.py --bool_flag '0' gives False , <class 'bool'>

python tmp.py --bool_flag 'False' gives False , <class 'bool'>

python tmp.py --bool_flag '1' gives True , <class 'bool'>

python tmp.py --bool_flag 'True' gives True , <class 'bool'>

Calling above code from a shell script would work too,

#!/bin/bash
flag=False
python tmp.py --bool_flag $flag

This will give the output: False , <class 'bool'>

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