The power of Argparse with plain Python functions!
Building a command-line interface? Found yourself uttering "argh!" while struggling with the API of argparse? Don't like the complexity but need the power?
Argh builds on the power of argparse (which comes with Python) and makes it really easy to use. It eliminates the complex API and lets you "dispatch" ordinary Python functions as CLI commands.
$ pip install argh
import argh
def verify_paths(paths: list[str], *, verbose: bool = False):
"""
Verify that all given paths exist.
"""
for path in paths:
if verbose:
print(f"Checking {path}...")
assert os.path.exists(path)
argh.dispatch_command(verify_paths)
Now you can run the script like this:
$ python app.py foo.txt bar/quux.txt
$ python app.py foo.txt bar/quux.txt --verbose
Checking foo.txt...
Checking bar/quux.txt...
$ python app.py -h
usage: app.py [-h] [-v] [paths ...]
Verify that all given paths exist.
positional arguments:
paths -
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose False
Please check the documentation for examples of multiple commands, modularity, help generation, advanced type annotations inspection, decorators and more:
Argh-powered applications are simple but flexible:
Pythonic, KISS: | Commands are plain Python functions. Almost no CLI-specific API to learn. |
---|---|
Reusable: | Endpoint functions can be used directly outside of CLI context. |
Static typing friendly: | 100% of the code including endpoint functions can be type-checked. Argh is driven primarily by type annotations. |
DRY: | Don't Repeat Yourself. The amount of boilerplate code is minimal. Among other things, Argh will:
|
Modular: | Declaration of commands can be decoupled from assembling and dispatching. |
Layered: | The complexity of code raises with requirements. |
Transparent: | You can directly access argparse.ArgumentParser if needed. |
Subcommands: | Easily nested commands. Argh isolates the complexity of subparsers. |
NIH free: | Argh supports completion, progress bars and everything else by being friendly to excellent 3rd-party libraries. No need to reinvent the wheel. |
Compact: | No dependencies apart from Python's standard library. |
See also the project page on GitHub, documentation and PyPI page.
Developed by Andrey Mikhaylenko since 2010.
See contributors for a list of contributors to this library.
The fastest way to improve this project is to submit tested and documented patches or detailed bug reports.
You can donate via Liberapay. This may speed up development or simply make the original author happy :)
Argh is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Argh is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with Argh. If not, see <http://gnu.org/licenses/>.