Asking is a Python package for asking questions and getting answers.
In a nutshell, your Python script invokes Asking with two inputs:
- A script to follow.
- A dictionary to read default values out of and populate with new values.
When the script ends, Asking returns some state to describe the success of the interaction, then the populated dictionary is yours to do with as you please.
Asking requires Python 3.8 or later.
Install Asking via pip:
pip install asking
Download the sample script to your working directory then run asking
to perform it:
asking sample.asking.yaml
Note that this will perform the script, but will not load or save any responses. Performing a script via the CLI application is intended only for testing.
A script is essentially a dictionary of stages, and a stage is a list of actions.
A script always starts with a stage named "start", and actions are invoked sequentially in order.
start:
- ask:
question: Name?
key: user.name
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- stop: true
This script asks the user for their name then exits.
The script contains just one stage, named "start". The stage contains just one action: an "ask" action.
The "ask" action contains a "question", which is printed to the screen. The "key" describes where in the dictionary the user's answer should be saved. "user.name" describes the "name" key of the "user" sub dictionary.
The "branches" describe how to react to the user's answer. "response" is a regular expression. Asking checks the user's answer against each expression in order, and uses the first one that matches. In this case, there's only one choice. "then" describes the actions to invoke on that branch and, in this case, we "stop" and send truthiness back to the host application.
For example:
from asking import demo
script = """
start:
- ask:
question: Name?
key: user.name
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- stop: true
"""
# demo() runs non-interactively with preset directions and
# is intended for demonstrating only. See the usage
# documentation for implementation guidance.
demo(script, directions={"user": {"name": "Bobby Pringles"}})
Name?
: Bobby Pringles
Stop reason: True
Responses:
{
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Pringles"
}
}
start:
- ask:
question: Name?
key: user.name
recall: true
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- stop: true
This example is identical to the previous except "recall" is now truthy. Asking will read the dictionary's current "key" value and offer it as the default value.
For example:
from asking import demo
script = """
start:
- ask:
question: Name?
key: user.name
recall: true
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- stop: true
"""
# demo() runs non-interactively with preset directions and
# is intended for demonstrating only. See the usage
# documentation for implementation guidance.
demo(
script,
responses={
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Sprinkles",
},
},
directions={
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Pringles",
},
},
)
Name? (default: Bobby Sprinkles)
: Bobby Pringles
Stop reason: True
Responses:
{
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Pringles"
}
}
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
branches:
- response: y
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
In this example, the responses are plain strings rather than regular expressions. Asking will present all the available options.
If the user enters "y" then Asking will stop and return truthiness to the host application. If the user enters "n" then Asking will stop and return falsiness.
For example:
from asking import demo
script = """
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
key: cake
branches:
- response: y
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
"""
# demo() runs non-interactively with preset directions and
# is intended for demonstrating only. See the usage
# documentation for implementation guidance.
demo(script, directions={"cake": "n"})
Cake? (y/n)
: n
Stop reason: False
Responses:
{
"cake": "n"
}
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
This is identical to the previous example, except now the first checked response is a list of options rather than a single string. Asking will use the first branch if the user hits enter without entering a value.
For example:
from asking import demo
script = """
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
key: cake
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
"""
# demo() runs non-interactively with preset directions and
# is intended for demonstrating only. See the usage
# documentation for implementation guidance.
demo(script, directions={"cake": ""})
Cake? (Y/n)
:
Stop reason: True
Responses:
{
"cake": ""
}
start:
- text: Today's date is {today}.
- ask:
question: Is this correct?
branches:
- response: y
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
To set some text value at runtime, specify the key in braces and include the value in the state when performing the script:
from asking import ask, State, YamlStringLoader
from datetime import date
loader = YamlStringLoader("""
start:
- text: Today's date is {today}.
- ask:
question: Is this correct?
key: correct
branches:
- response: y
then:
- stop: true
- response: n
then:
- stop: false
""")
state = State(
{},
color=False,
directions={
"correct": "y",
},
references={
"today": date.today(),
},
)
ask(loader, state)
Today's date is 2021-11-30.
Is this correct? (y/n)
: y
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
key: cake
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- goto: cake
- response: n
then:
- goto: tea
cake:
- ask:
question: Which cake?
key: which_cake
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- goto: tea
tea:
- ask:
question: Tea?
key: tea
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- goto: final
- response: n
then:
- goto: final
final:
- text: Thank you for your order!
- stop: true
This example presents multiple questions. If the user wants cake then they're asked which one. If they don't want cake, or if they answered which cake they want, then they're asked if they want tea. Either way, the script ends with a thank-you message then stops successfully.
For example:
from asking import demo
script = """
start:
- ask:
question: Cake?
key: cake
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- goto: cake
- response: n
then:
- goto: tea
cake:
- ask:
question: Which cake?
key: which_cake
branches:
- response: "^.+$"
then:
- goto: tea
tea:
- ask:
question: Tea?
key: tea
branches:
- response: [y, ""]
then:
- goto: final
- response: n
then:
- goto: final
final:
- text: Thank you for your order!
- stop: true
"""
# demo() runs non-interactively with preset directions and
# is intended for demonstrating only. See the usage
# documentation for implementation guidance.
demo(
script,
directions={
"cake": "",
"which_cake": "Battenberg",
"tea": "",
},
)
Cake? (Y/n)
:
Which cake?
: Battenberg
Tea? (Y/n)
:
Thank you for your order!
Stop reason: True
Responses:
{
"cake": "",
"tea": "",
"which_cake": "Battenberg"
}
Asking offers the following options for loading a YAML script:
DictionaryLoader
loads any Python dictionary.FileLoader
loads a YAML file.YamlResourceLoader
loads a YAML package resource.YamlStringLoader
loads a YAML string.
A State
instance must be made available to your script. This describes the dictionary to read/write and any dynamic values.
Essentially, a script is performed by:
- Constructing a loader.
- Constructing a state, including your responses dictionary.
- Passing the loader and state into
ask()
.
from asking import ask, State, YamlResourceLoader
responses = {}
loader = YamlResourceLoader(__package__, "sample.asking.yml")
state = State(responses)
stop_reason = ask(loader, state)
When ask()
is complete, it will return whatever value the performance's "stop" action returned, and the responses dictionary will be populated with the user's answers.
By default, Asking will -- naturally -- ask users for input.
To test your script without human interaction, you can pass directions into the state. This is a dictionary containing the value to respond with for each question key.
For example:
from asking import ask, State, FileLoader
from pprint import pprint
responses = {}
loader = FileLoader("sample.asking.yml")
state = State(
responses,
color=False,
directions={
"ready": "y",
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Pringles",
"smell": "Sulphur",
},
"save": "y",
},
)
stop_reason = ask(loader, state)
print("Stop reason:", stop_reason)
pprint(responses)
Asking Demo
Welcome to the Asking demo!
Are you ready? (y/N)
: y
Great! Let's get started!
What's your name?
: Bobby Pringles
What's your favourite smell?
: Sulphur
Here's your configuration:
{
"ready": "y",
"user": {
"name": "Bobby Pringles",
"smell": "Sulphur"
}
}
Okay to save? (y/n)
: y
Stop reason: True
{'ready': 'y',
'save': 'y',
'user': {'name': 'Bobby Pringles', 'smell': 'Sulphur'}}
These directions also allow you to invoke Asking in unit tests, and assert on stop reasons and dictionary values for given inputs.
ask:
branches:
- response: string or string list, required
then:
- action
key: string
question: string, required
recall: boolean, default=False
"ask" asks a question.
key
describes the path in the responses dictionary to read/write the value. Use .
as a path separator.
recall
indicates whether to load the response dictionary's current value as the default answer.
branches
describes the possible reactions to the user's answer.
response
can be a string value, list of string values, or a regular expression. The first branch with a matching response will be followed.
then
describes the list of actions to perform when the branch is followed.
goto: stage
When a "goto" action is encountered then execution will jump immediately to the specified stage.
responses: json
The "responses" action prints the current values of the response dictionary.
stop: any
The "stop" action immediately stops the script and returns the reason to the host application.
The reason is required but can be any value; even a list or dictionary.
text: string
The "text" action simply prints a line of text.
title: string
The "title" action prints a line of text formatted as a title.
To contribute a bug report, enhancement or feature request, please raise an issue at github.com/cariad/asking/issues.
If you want to contribute a code change, please raise an issue first so we can chat about the direction you want to take.
Asking is released at github.com/cariad/asking under the MIT Licence.
See LICENSE for more information.
Hello! 👋 I'm Cariad Eccleston and I'm a freelance DevOps and backend engineer. My contact details are available on my personal wiki at cariad.earth.
Please consider supporting my open source projects by sponsoring me on GitHub.
- ❤️ to jonathaneunice/ansiwrap for neatly wrapping strings containing ANSI escape codes.
- Command line support by Cline.
- YAML support by PyYAML.
- This documentation was pressed by Edition.