parser.add_argument('-auto', action='store_true')
How can I store false if -auto
is unspecified? I can faintly remember that this way, it stores None if unspecified
The store_true
option automatically creates a default value of False.
Likewise, store_false
will default to True when the command-line argument is not present.
The source for this behavior is succinct and clear: http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/2.7/Lib/argparse.py#l861
The argparse docs aren't clear on the subject, so I'll update them now: http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/49677cc6d83a
-bar
, then the dest
is automatically set to bar
, based on hg.python.org/cpython/rev/49677cc6d83a. However, I don't see where this default behavior is set in the code. I've always set the dest
argument explicitly. Also, I think letting bar
default to the dest
for the --bar
option does not really make sense if --bar
is store_false
. Shouldn't the dest
be notbar
in this case?
Jun 20, 2013 at 10:48
./my_python_script --do_something
then do_something will be set to 'True'. Conversely, if action='store_false' for that same cmdline, then do_something will be set to 'False'.
With
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-flag', action='store_true')
args = parser.parse_args()
print(args.flag)
running yields
False
So it appears to be storing False
by default.
Raymond Hettinger answers OP's question already.
However, my group has experienced readability issues using "store_false". Especially when new members join our group. This is because it is most intuitive way to think is that when a user specifies an argument, the value corresponding to that argument will be True or 1.
For example, if the code is -
parser.add_argument('--stop_logging', action='store_false')
The code reader may likely expect the logging statement to be off when the value in stop_logging is true. But code such as the following will lead to the opposite of the desired behavior -
if not stop_logging:
#log
On the other hand, if the interface is defined as the following, then the "if-statement" works and is more intuitive to read -
parser.add_argument('--stop_logging', action='store_true')
if not stop_logging:
#log
parser.add_argument('--stop_logging', action='store_false', dest='use_logging')
.
I've found the default, when unspecified, to vary between OSX and Linux.
With the following line of code,
parser.add_argument('-auto', action='store_true')
and then omitting -auto from the command line a Mac results in auto being assigned a value of False, as expected, whereas on Ubuntu Linux auto is assigned True by default.
store_false will actually default to 0
by default (you can test to verify). To change what it defaults to, just add default=True
to your declaration.
So in this case:
parser.add_argument('-auto', action='store_true', default=True)
>>> parser.add_argument('--bar', action='store_false')
_StoreFalseAction(option_strings=['--bar'], dest='bar', nargs=0, const=False, default=True, type=None, choices=None, help=None, metavar=None)
>>> parser.parse_args([])
Namespace(bar=True)