The title pretty much says it all. If I have nargs greater than 1, is there any way I can set restrictions (such as choice/type) on the individual args parsed?
This is some example code:
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-c', '--credits', nargs=2,
help='number of credits required for a subject')
For the -c argument I need to specify a subject and how many credits are required. The subject should be limited to a predefined list of subjects, and the number of credits required should be a float.
I could probably do this with a subparser, but as it is this is already part of a sub-command so I don't really want things to get any more complicated.
You can validate it with a custom action:
import argparse
import collections
class ValidateCredits(argparse.Action):
def __call__(self, parser, args, values, option_string=None):
# print '{n} {v} {o}'.format(n=args, v=values, o=option_string)
valid_subjects = ('foo', 'bar')
subject, credits = values
if subject not in valid_subjects:
raise ValueError('invalid subject {s!r}'.format(s=subject))
credits = float(credits)
Credits = collections.namedtuple('Credits', 'subject required')
setattr(args, self.dest, Credits(subject, credits))
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-c', '--credits', nargs=2, action=ValidateCredits,
help='subject followed by number of credits required',
metavar=('SUBJECT', 'CREDITS')
)
args = parser.parse_args()
print(args)
print(args.credits.subject)
print(args.credits.required)
For example,
% test.py -c foo 2
Namespace(credits=Credits(subject='foo', required=2.0))
foo
2.0
% test.py -c baz 2
ValueError: invalid subject 'baz'
% test.py -c foo bar
ValueError: could not convert string to float: bar
i suppose you could try this - in add_argument(), you can specify a limited set of inputs with choice='xyz' or choice=[this, that]
as described here:
http://docs.python.org/library/argparse.html#choices
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-c', '--credits', choice='abcde', nargs=2,
help='number of credits required for a subject')