Writing argparse-based command line applications can become tedious, repetitive, and difficult to do right. Relax and let this library free you from that burden.
This library helps you quickly implement an interactive command-based application in Python.
We all know that writing documentation is very important and yet it can easily become and afterthought or a nice to have if we're not diligent. This is often because it means duplicating a piece of your implementation in words, effectively writing the same thing twice. Recline strives to deduplicate this work by taking a documentation first attitude where your documentation becomes the implementation without additional work from you.
The default mode is to run a REPL interface where a prompt is given to the user, the user types one of the available commands, the application processes it, displays the result, and then control is returned to the user once more.
But if your user isn't expected to or doesn't always want to run multiple commands, you also get a more traditional command-line interface for free.
The application will be command based. Each command will have one or more words that identify the command. It may also have one or more arguments that augment or vary the action that command will take.
While the library is designed to be easy to implement for simple or small applications, it also comes with full power features for larger use cases including:
- Tab completion
- Input verification
- Output formatting
- Debugger integration
Some things to consider and prepare before you can use this library.
1. Python 3.9 or later
You can install the package from pypi using the pip utility:
pip install recline
You can then import the library into your application:
import recline
After installing the package, you can get started with a few lines in hello.py
:
import recline
@recline.command
def hello(name: str = None) -> None:
"""A basic hello world
You can greet just about anybody with this command if they give you their name!
Args:
name: If a name is provided, the greeting will be more personal
"""
response = "I'm at your command"
if name:
response += ", %s" % name
print(response)
recline.relax()
The default mode when a recline applciation is run is an interactive style. Running
our above hello.py
results in the following output:
$ python hello.py
> help
Available Commands:
hello - A basic hello world You can greet just about anybody with this command if
Built-in Commands
-----------------
exit - Exit the application
help - Display a list of available commands and their short description
man - Display the full man page for a given command
> hello ?
A basic hello world You can greet just about anybody with this command if
Optional arguments:
-name <name> If a name is provided, the greeting will be more personal
Default: None
> hello
I'm at your command
> hello -name Dave
I'm at your command, Dave
> exit
$
If you would like to use the application as part of a larger script, it is much easier to do in a non-interactive way. This is also possible using recline without needing to change the application. Here's an example:
$ python hello.py -c "hello -name Dave"
I'm at your command, Dave
$
See the full documentation for more advanced usages and examples
You may read about the contribution process including how to build and test your changes here.
There are a large number of different command line libraries on PyPi and GitHub. And some of them have the same sort of decorator design. Most, however, are missing the interactive elements that recline focuses on (tab completion, command chaining, background jobs, man pages). If you're still looking for the right fit for your application and recline isn't it, you can check out these other fine projects (in no particular order):
- https://github.com/kootenpv/cliche
- https://github.com/gowithfloat/clippy
- https://github.com/epsy/clize
- https://github.com/pallets/click
- https://github.com/micheles/plac
- https://github.com/google/python-fire
- https://github.com/kennethreitz-archive/clint
- https://docs.openstack.org/cliff/latest
- https://github.com/miguelgrinberg/climax