This module helps scripts to parse the command line arguments in
sys.argv
.
It supports the same conventions as the Unix getopt()
function (including the special meanings of arguments of the form
`-
' and `-
-
').
Long options similar to those supported by
GNU software may be used as well via an optional third argument.
This module provides a single function and an exception:
'-
-'
characters should not be included in the option
name. Options which require an argument should be followed by an
equal sign ('='
).
The return value consists of two elements: the first is a list of
(option, 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., '-x'
)
or two hyphens for long options (e.g., '-
-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.
An example using only Unix style options:
>>> import getopt, string >>> args = string.split('-a -b -cfoo -d bar a1 a2') >>> args ['-a', '-b', '-cfoo', '-d', 'bar', 'a1', 'a2'] >>> optlist, args = getopt.getopt(args, 'abc:d:') >>> optlist [('-a', ''), ('-b', ''), ('-c', 'foo'), ('-d', 'bar')] >>> args ['a1', 'a2'] >>>
Using long option names is equally easy:
>>> s = '--condition=foo --testing --output-file abc.def -x a1 a2' >>> args = string.split(s) >>> args ['--condition=foo', '--testing', '--output-file', 'abc.def', '-x', 'a1', 'a2'] >>> optlist, args = getopt.getopt(args, 'x', [ ... 'condition=', 'output-file=', 'testing']) >>> optlist [('--condition', 'foo'), ('--testing', ''), ('--output-file', 'abc.def'), ('-x', '')] >>> args ['a1', 'a2'] >>>