14

I'm trying to disable same argument occurences within one command line, using argparse

./python3 --argument1=something --argument2 --argument1=something_else

which means this should raise an error, because value of argument1 is overriden, by default, argparse just overrides the value and continues like nothing happened... Is there any smart way how to disable this behaviour?

2 Answers 2

17

I don't think there is a native way to do it using argparse, but fortunately, argparse offers methods to report custom errors. The most elegant way is probably to define a custom action that checks for duplicates (and exits if there are).

class UniqueStore(argparse.Action):
    def __call__(self, parser, namespace, values, option_string):
        if getattr(namespace, self.dest, self.default) is not self.default:
            parser.error(option_string + " appears several times.")
        setattr(namespace, self.dest, values)

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-f', '--foo', action=UniqueStore)

args = parser.parse_args()

(Read the docs about cutom actions)

Another way is to use the append action and count the len of the list.

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-f', '--foo', action='append')
args = parser.parse_args()

if len(args.foo) > 1:
    parser.error("--foo appears several times.")
2

There's no built in test or constraint. A positional argument will be handled only once, but the flagged (or optional) ones can, as you say, be repeated. This lets you collect multiple occurrences with append or count actions.

The override action is acceptable to most people. Why might your user use the option more than once? Why should the first be preferred over the last?

A custom Action may be the best choice. It could raise an error if the namespace[dest] already has a non-default value. Or this Action could add some other 'repeat' flag to the namespace.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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