Thanks again to @IotaSpencer for writing this article :)
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Using utils.IRCParser()
As of 22/02/2017 (1.2-dev), PyLink allows plugin creators to either parse command arguments themselves or use a sub-classed instance of argparse.ArgumentParser() to parse their arguments.
First off, you will already have access to IRCParser due to importing
utils
.
Otherwise, this is how to include it…
from pylinkirc import utils
When you add a command that you want to use
utils.IRCParser()
with, the following is a guide on how to
add arguments.
Note: Most if not all the examples are from Python’s argparse documentation, linked above.
Positional (Named) Arguments
'argname') SomeParser.add_argument(
Flag Arguments / Switch Arguments
= utils.IRCParser()
SomeParser '-a', '--argumentname') SomeParser.addargument(
Action
Actions define what to do when given an argument (i.e. whether it is used by itself or as some other sort of value).
Here are some of the actions that argparse
defines:
store
- just stores the value given. This is the default when an action isn’t provided.python >>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() >>> parser.add_argument('--foo') >>> parser.parse_args('--foo 1'.split()) Namespace(foo='1')
store_true
/store_false
- used when you just want to check if an argument was used.>>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() >>> parser.add_argument('--foo', action='store_true') >>> parser.add_argument('--bar', action='store_false') >>> parser.add_argument('--baz', action='store_false') >>> parser.parse_args('--foo --bar'.split()) =True, bar=False, baz=True) Namespace(foo
append
- additively stores arguments if a switch is given multiple times.>>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() >>> parser.add_argument('--foo', action='append') >>> parser.parse_args('--foo 1 --foo 2'.split()) =['1', '2']) Namespace(foo
count
- counts how many times an argument was used (for flag/switch arguments only)python >>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() >>> parser.add_argument('--verbose', '-v', action='count') >>> parser.parse_args(['-vvv']) Namespace(verbose=3)
You can also specify an arbitrary Action
by sub-classing
Action. If you want to do this, you must import argparse
in
your plugin.
More info on that is available here.
Type Constraints
If you want an argument to be of a certain type, you can include a
type=TYPE
keyword, done like so.
'argname', type=int) SomeParser.add_argument(
As such this will return an error if the input can not be converted
to an int
.
Types usable are str
and int
, there may be
more that are allowed in this keyword argument, but str
and
int
are the only ones we have throughly used.
Note: TYPE can be technically any callable. More about that here!
Choices
If you want to limit what the user can enter for an argument, like if they have to choose something from a pre-existing list.
This can be used by adding
choices=['A', 'AAAA', 'CNAME']
into the
SomeParser.add_argument()
call along with the option
entries (-a/–argname).
'argname', choices=['A', 'AAAA', 'CNAME']) SomeParser.add_argument(
Needed Args (aka. nargs)
The keyword argument nargs
or Needed Args associates a
different number of arguments to an action.
N
- this is an integer; N arguments will be gathered into a list. nargs=1 produces a list of one item, while the default (not using nargs) produces just the argument itself.'?'
- One argument will be used. Ifdefault
is defined in the call, then default will be used if there is no given argument.'*'
- All arguments are gathered into a list. It only makes sense to use this once in a command handler.'+'
- Like ’*’ but raises an error if there wasn’t at least one argument given.utils.IRCParser.REMAINDER
- remaining arguments are gathered into a list; this is usually used when you need to get a phrase stored, such as the ‘quote’ text of a quote, a service bot part reason, etc. This is an alias toargparse.REMAINDER
.