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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-08-11 19:55:06 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-08-11 19:55:06 (GMT) |
commit | a8e484c8f54dc9b2cf8dd8a82f051ee891d4fdd4 (patch) | |
tree | 665c2c647bbd055c00926260df9e397936e90781 /Doc | |
parent | f29f47b38beae54db959d0dd2f0800d5dd3fc174 (diff) | |
download | cpython-a8e484c8f54dc9b2cf8dd8a82f051ee891d4fdd4.zip cpython-a8e484c8f54dc9b2cf8dd8a82f051ee891d4fdd4.tar.gz cpython-a8e484c8f54dc9b2cf8dd8a82f051ee891d4fdd4.tar.bz2 |
getopt(): revise description of long_options parameter slightly so it will
be less confusing; add a paragraph separation so that comments about
the options and long_options parameters don't have references that
are easily misinterpreted.
Adjust the interactive examples to not need the string module.
Add an example showing how the module is commonly used in a script.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libgetopt.tex | 62 |
1 files changed, 43 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libgetopt.tex b/Doc/lib/libgetopt.tex index 56a8b3c..4f32225 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libgetopt.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libgetopt.tex @@ -21,25 +21,26 @@ argument list to be parsed, without the leading reference to the running program. Typically, this means \samp{sys.argv[1:]}. \var{options} is the string of option letters that the script wants to recognize, with options that require an argument followed by a colon -(i.e., the same format that \UNIX{} \cfunction{getopt()} uses). If -specified, \var{long_options} is a list of strings with the names of -the long options which should be supported. The leading +(\character{:}; i.e., the same format that \UNIX{} +\cfunction{getopt()} uses). + +\var{long_options}, if specified, must be a list of strings with the +names of the long options which should be supported. The leading \code{'-}\code{-'} characters should not be included in the option -name. Options which require an argument should be followed by an -equal sign (\code{'='}). +name. Long options which require an argument should be followed by an +equal sign (\character{=}). The return value consists of two elements: the first is a list of \code{(\var{option}, \var{value})} pairs; the second is the list of program arguments left after the option list was stripped (this is a -trailing slice of the first argument). -Each option-and-value pair returned has the option as its first -element, prefixed with a hyphen for short options (e.g., \code{'-x'}) -or two hyphens for long options (e.g., \code{'-}\code{-long-option'}), -and the option argument as its second element, or an empty string if -the option has no argument. -The options occur in the list in the same order in which they were -found, thus allowing multiple occurrences. Long and short options may -be mixed. +trailing slice of \var{args}). Each option-and-value pair returned +has the option as its first element, prefixed with a hyphen for short +options (e.g., \code{'-x'}) or two hyphens for long options (e.g., +\code{'-}\code{-long-option'}), and the option argument as its second +element, or an empty string if the option has no argument. The +options occur in the list in the same order in which they were found, +thus allowing multiple occurrences. Long and short options may be +mixed. \end{funcdesc} \begin{excdesc}{GetoptError} @@ -61,8 +62,8 @@ Alias for \exception{GetoptError}; for backward compatibility. An example using only \UNIX{} style options: \begin{verbatim} ->>> import getopt, string ->>> args = string.split('-a -b -cfoo -d bar a1 a2') +>>> import getopt +>>> args = '-a -b -cfoo -d bar a1 a2'.split() >>> args ['-a', '-b', '-cfoo', '-d', 'bar', 'a1', 'a2'] >>> optlist, args = getopt.getopt(args, 'abc:d:') @@ -70,14 +71,13 @@ An example using only \UNIX{} style options: [('-a', ''), ('-b', ''), ('-c', 'foo'), ('-d', 'bar')] >>> args ['a1', 'a2'] ->>> \end{verbatim} Using long option names is equally easy: \begin{verbatim} >>> s = '--condition=foo --testing --output-file abc.def -x a1 a2' ->>> args = string.split(s) +>>> args = s.split() >>> args ['--condition=foo', '--testing', '--output-file', 'abc.def', '-x', 'a1', 'a2'] >>> optlist, args = getopt.getopt(args, 'x', [ @@ -87,5 +87,29 @@ Using long option names is equally easy: '')] >>> args ['a1', 'a2'] ->>> +\end{verbatim} + +In a script, typical usage is something like this: + +\begin{verbatim} +import getopt, sys + +def main(): + try: + opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "ho:", ["help", "output="]) + except getopt.GetoptError: + # print help information and exit: + usage() + sys.exit(2) + output = None + for o, a in opts: + if o in ("-h", "--help"): + usage() + sys.exit() + if o in ("-o", "--output"): + output = a + # ... + +if __name__ == "__main__": + main() \end{verbatim} |