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| Started by | Eduardo Alvarez <!nospam!astrochelonian@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2013-08-31 13:11 -0400 |
| Last post | 2013-09-01 08:53 +0200 |
| Articles | 5 — 4 participants |
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argparse - specify order of argument parsing? Eduardo Alvarez <!nospam!astrochelonian@gmail.com> - 2013-08-31 13:11 -0400
Re: argparse - specify order of argument parsing? Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> - 2013-08-31 12:50 -0500
Re: argparse - specify order of argument parsing? Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2013-08-31 14:13 -0400
Re: argparse - specify order of argument parsing? Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2013-08-31 14:17 -0400
Re: argparse - specify order of argument parsing? Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2013-09-01 08:53 +0200
| From | Eduardo Alvarez <!nospam!astrochelonian@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-08-31 13:11 -0400 |
| Subject | argparse - specify order of argument parsing? |
| Message-ID | <slrnl248ua.4b8.!nospam!astrochelonian@hypnotoad.vtr.net> |
When using argparse, is there a way to specify in what order arguments get parsed? I am writing a script whose parameters can be modified in the following order: Defaults -> config file -> command-line switches. However, I want to give the option of specifying a config file using a command line switch as well, so logically, that file should be parsed before any other arguments are applied. However, it seems that parse_args() parses arguments in the order they're given, so if the config file switch is not given first, the config file will overwrite whatever was in the command-line switches, which should have higher priority. Thank you in advance, -- Eduardo Alvarez
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| From | Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-08-31 12:50 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.419.1377971352.19984.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #53370 |
On 2013-08-31 13:11, Eduardo Alvarez wrote:
> When using argparse, is there a way to specify in what order
> arguments get parsed? I am writing a script whose parameters can be
> modified in the following order:
>
> Defaults -> config file -> command-line switches.
>
> However, I want to give the option of specifying a config file
> using a command line switch as well, so logically, that file should
> be parsed before any other arguments are applied. However, it seems
> that parse_args() parses arguments in the order they're given, so
> if the config file switch is not given first, the config file will
> overwrite whatever was in the command-line switches, which should
> have higher priority.
While I haven't come up with a good solution using argparse/optparse
alone, I've found that it's easier (for processing) to specify the
config file as an environment variable. So rather than doing
my_prog.py -c /path/to/config.ini arg1 arg2 ...
I just do
MY_PROG_CONF=/path/to/config.ini my_prog.py arg1 arg2 ...
...at least on *nix systems; on Win32, it's
c:\temp> set MY_PROG_CONF=c:\path\to\config.ini
c:\temp> python my_prog.py arg1 arg2 ...
Then you just intercept the config-file name from os.environ:
config_file = os.environ.get(
"MY_PROG_CONF",
default_ini_location)
-tkc
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| From | Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-08-31 14:13 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.420.1377972816.19984.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #53370 |
On 8/31/2013 1:11 PM, Eduardo Alvarez wrote: > When using argparse, is there a way to specify in what order arguments > get parsed? I expect argparse to forward iterate the sequence of arguments that it receives. > I am writing a script whose parameters can be modified in > the following order: > > Defaults -> config file -> command-line switches. > > However, I want to give the option of specifying a config file using a > command line switch as well, so logically, that file should be parsed > before any other arguments are applied. However, it seems that > parse_args() parses arguments in the order they're given, Right. > so if the > config file switch is not given first, the config file will overwrite > whatever was in the command-line switches, which should have higher > priority. So just document that a config file has to be given first to work as expected. Order dependence among arguments is common. -- Terry Jan Reedy
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| From | Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-08-31 14:17 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.421.1377973205.19984.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #53370 |
On 8/31/2013 2:13 PM, Terry Reedy wrote: > On 8/31/2013 1:11 PM, Eduardo Alvarez wrote: >> When using argparse, is there a way to specify in what order arguments >> get parsed? > > I expect argparse to forward iterate the sequence of arguments that it > receives. Aside from the environment variable solution, you could search sys.argv for 'config=filename' and remove it and process it *before* you invoke argparse. -- Terry Jan Reedy
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| From | Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-09-01 08:53 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.438.1378018398.19984.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #53370 |
Eduardo Alvarez wrote:
> When using argparse, is there a way to specify in what order arguments
> get parsed? I am writing a script whose parameters can be modified in
> the following order:
>
> Defaults -> config file -> command-line switches.
>
> However, I want to give the option of specifying a config file using a
> command line switch as well, so logically, that file should be parsed
> before any other arguments are applied. However, it seems that
> parse_args() parses arguments in the order they're given, so if the
> config file switch is not given first, the config file will overwrite
> whatever was in the command-line switches, which should have higher
> priority.
>
> Thank you in advance,
If you use
http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#fromfile-prefix-chars
to read the configuration file it should be obvious to the user that the
order is significant. You can even construct multiple config files with
partially overlapping options:
$ cat load_options.py
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(fromfile_prefix_chars="@")
parser.add_argument("--infile")
parser.add_argument("--outfile")
parser.add_argument("--logfile")
print(parser.parse_args())
$ cat option1.txt
--infile=alpha.txt
--outfile=beta.txt
$ cat option2.txt
--outfile=GAMMA.txt
--logfile=DELTA.txt
$ python load_options.py @option1.txt @option2.txt
Namespace(infile='alpha.txt', logfile='DELTA.txt', outfile='GAMMA.txt')
$ python load_options.py @option2.txt @option1.txt
Namespace(infile='alpha.txt', logfile='DELTA.txt', outfile='beta.txt')
If you insist you could modify the argument list with the following hack:
sys.argv[1:] = sorted(sys.argv[1:], key=lambda arg: arg.startswith("@"),
reverse=True)
There might also be a way to utilize parse_known_args().
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