views:

353

answers:

2

I'm writing a program in Python that accepts command line arguments. I am parsing them with getopt (though my choice of getopt is no Catholic marriage. I'm more than willing to use any other library). Is there any way to specify that certain arguments must be given, or do I have to manually make sure that all the arguments were given?

Edit: I changed all instances of option to argument in response to public outcry. Let it not be said that I am not responsive to people who help me :-)

+5  A: 

The simplest approach would be to do it yourself. I.e.

found_f = False
try:
    opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "ho:v", ["help", "output="])
except getopt.GetoptError, err:
    print str(err)
    usage()
    sys.exit(2)
for o, a in opts:
    if o == '-f':
      process_f()
      found_f = True
    elif ...
if not found_f:
    print "-f was not given"
    usage()
    sys.exit(2)
Martin v. Löwis
I was looking for a way not to do it myself, but if there is none, then I guess this is the answer.
Nathan Fellman
+9  A: 

As for me I prefer using optparse module, it is quite powerful, for exapmle it can automatically generate -h message by given options:

from optparse import OptionParser

parser = OptionParser()
parser.add_option("-f", "--file", dest="filename",
                  help="write report to FILE", metavar="FILE")
parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet",
                  action="store_false", dest="verbose", default=True,
                  help="don't print status messages to stdout")

(options, args) = parser.parse_args()

You should manually check if all arguments were given:

if len(args) != 1:
        parser.error("incorrect number of arguments")

Making options mandatory seems to be quite strange for me - they are called options not without any sense...

Mihail
If the value *must* be given, but you have the option of which value to give, then it's still an option, isn't it? What would you call it?
Nathan Fellman
Sorry, I didn't understand the purpose of this yet. Can you give a me some example, e.g. describing cli input? Not essential the exact problem you are solving, just any...
Mihail
sure. I'm writing a script that works on a file. If you don't specify a filename, the script won't know what to work on, so the filename is mandatory.
Nathan Fellman
So, in terms of optparse this is arguments ('args' in the code above), and unfortunatelly, as I wrote you should check them manually...
Mihail