argparse
replaces dashes in optional arguments by underscores to determine their destination:
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--use-unicorns', action='store_true')
args = parser.parse_args(['--use-unicorns'])
print(args) # returns: Namespace(use_unicorns=True)
However the user has to remember whether the option is --use-unicorns
or --use_unicorns
; using the wrong variant raises an error.
This can cause some frustration as the variable args.use_unicorns
in the code does not make it clear which variant was defined.
How can I make argparse
accept both --use-unicorns
and --use_unicorns
as valid ways to define this optional argument?
parser.add_argument
accepts more than one flag for an argument (link to documentation). One easy way to make the parser accept both variants is to declare the argument as
parser.add_argument('--use-unicorns', '--use_unicorns', action='store_true')
However both options will show up in the help, and it is not very elegant as it forces one to write the variants manually.
An alternative is to subclass argparse.ArgumentParser
to make the matching invariant to replacing dashes by underscore. This requires a little bit of fiddling, as both argparse_ActionsContainer._parse_optional
and argparse_ActionsContainer._get_option_tuples
have to be modified to handle this matching and abbrevations, e.g. --use_unic
.
I ended up with the following subclassed method, where the matching to abbrevations is delegated from _parse_optional
to _get_option_tuples
:
from gettext import gettext as _
import argparse
class ArgumentParser(argparse.ArgumentParser):
def _parse_optional(self, arg_string):
# if it's an empty string, it was meant to be a positional
if not arg_string:
return None
# if it doesn't start with a prefix, it was meant to be positional
if not arg_string[0] in self.prefix_chars:
return None
# if it's just a single character, it was meant to be positional
if len(arg_string) == 1:
return None
option_tuples = self._get_option_tuples(arg_string)
# if multiple actions match, the option string was ambiguous
if len(option_tuples) > 1:
options = ', '.join([option_string
for action, option_string, explicit_arg in option_tuples])
args = {'option': arg_string, 'matches': options}
msg = _('ambiguous option: %(option)s could match %(matches)s')
self.error(msg % args)
# if exactly one action matched, this segmentation is good,
# so return the parsed action
elif len(option_tuples) == 1:
option_tuple, = option_tuples
return option_tuple
# if it was not found as an option, but it looks like a negative
# number, it was meant to be positional
# unless there are negative-number-like options
if self._negative_number_matcher.match(arg_string):
if not self._has_negative_number_optionals:
return None
# if it contains a space, it was meant to be a positional
if ' ' in arg_string:
return None
# it was meant to be an optional but there is no such option
# in this parser (though it might be a valid option in a subparser)
return None, arg_string, None
def _get_option_tuples(self, option_string):
result = []
if '=' in option_string:
option_prefix, explicit_arg = option_string.split('=', 1)
else:
option_prefix = option_string
explicit_arg = None
if option_prefix in self._option_string_actions:
action = self._option_string_actions[option_prefix]
tup = action, option_prefix, explicit_arg
result.append(tup)
else: # imperfect match
chars = self.prefix_chars
if option_string[0] in chars and option_string[1] not in chars:
# short option: if single character, can be concatenated with arguments
short_option_prefix = option_string[:2]
short_explicit_arg = option_string[2:]
if short_option_prefix in self._option_string_actions:
action = self._option_string_actions[short_option_prefix]
tup = action, short_option_prefix, short_explicit_arg
result.append(tup)
underscored = {k.replace('-', '_'): k for k in self._option_string_actions}
option_prefix = option_prefix.replace('-', '_')
if option_prefix in underscored:
action = self._option_string_actions[underscored[option_prefix]]
tup = action, underscored[option_prefix], explicit_arg
result.append(tup)
elif self.allow_abbrev:
for option_string in underscored:
if option_string.startswith(option_prefix):
action = self._option_string_actions[underscored[option_string]]
tup = action, underscored[option_string], explicit_arg
result.append(tup)
# return the collected option tuples
return result
A lot of this code is directly derived from the corresponding methods in argparse
(from the CPython implementation here). Using this subclass should make the matching of optional arguments invariant to using dashes -
or underscores _
.