QCommandLineParser#
The QCommandLineParser
class provides a means for handling the command line options. More…
Synopsis#
Functions#
def
addHelpOption
()def
addOption
(commandLineOption)def
addOptions
(options)def
addPositionalArgument
(name, description[, syntax=””])def
addVersionOption
()def
applicationDescription
()def
clearPositionalArguments
()def
errorText
()def
helpText
()def
isSet
(option)def
isSet
(name)def
optionNames
()def
parse
(arguments)def
positionalArguments
()def
process
(app)def
process
(arguments)def
setApplicationDescription
(description)def
setOptionsAfterPositionalArgumentsMode
(mode)def
setSingleDashWordOptionMode
(parsingMode)def
showHelp
([exitCode=0])def
showVersion
()def
unknownOptionNames
()def
value
(option)def
value
(name)def
values
(option)def
values
(name)
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
QCoreApplication
provides the command-line arguments as a simple list of strings. QCommandLineParser
provides the ability to define a set of options, parse the command-line arguments, and store which options have actually been used, as well as option values.
Any argument that isn’t an option (i.e. doesn’t start with a -
) is stored as a “positional argument”.
The parser handles short names, long names, more than one name for the same option, and option values.
Options on the command line are recognized as starting with a single or double -
character(s). The option -
(single dash alone) is a special case, often meaning standard input, and not treated as an option. The parser will treat everything after the option --
(double dash) as positional arguments.
Short options are single letters. The option v
would be specified by passing -v
on the command line. In the default parsing mode, short options can be written in a compact form, for instance -abc
is equivalent to -a -b -c
. The parsing mode for can be set to ParseAsLongOptions
, in which case -abc
will be parsed as the long option abc
.
Long options are more than one letter long and cannot be compacted together. The long option verbose
would be passed as --verbose
or -verbose
.
Passing values to options can be done using the assignment operator: -v=value
--verbose=value
, or a space: -v value
--verbose value
, i.e. the next argument is used as value (even if it starts with a -
).
The parser does not support optional values - if an option is set to require a value, one must be present. If such an option is placed last and has no value, the option will be treated as if it had not been specified.
The parser does not automatically support negating or disabling long options by using the format --disable-option
or --no-option
. However, it is possible to handle this case explicitly by making an option with no-option
as one of its names, and handling the option explicitly.
Example:
if __name__ == "__main__": app = QCoreApplication(argc, argv) QCoreApplication.setApplicationName("my-copy-program") QCoreApplication.setApplicationVersion("1.0") parser = QCommandLineParser() parser.setApplicationDescription("Test helper") parser.addHelpOption() parser.addVersionOption() parser.addPositionalArgument("source", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Source file to copy.")) parser.addPositionalArgument("destination", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Destination directory.")) # A boolean option with a single name (-p) showProgressOption = QCommandLineOption("p", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Show progress during copy")) parser.addOption(showProgressOption) # A boolean option with multiple names (-f, --force) QCommandLineOption forceOption(QStringList() << "f" << "force", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Overwrite existing files.")) parser.addOption(forceOption) # An option with a value QCommandLineOption targetDirectoryOption(QStringList() << "t" << "target-directory", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Copy all source files into <directory>."), QCoreApplication.translate("main", "directory")) parser.addOption(targetDirectoryOption) # Process the actual command line arguments given by the user parser.process(app) args = parser.positionalArguments() # source is args.at(0), destination is args.at(1) showProgress = parser.isSet(showProgressOption) force = parser.isSet(forceOption) targetDir = parser.value(targetDirectoryOption) # ...
If your compiler supports the C++11 standard, the three addOption()
calls in the above example can be simplified:
parser.addOptions({ # A boolean option with a single name (-p) {"p", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Show progress during copy")}, # A boolean option with multiple names (-f, --force) {{"f", "force"}, QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Overwrite existing files.")}, # An option with a value {{"t", "target-directory"}, QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Copy all source files into <directory>."), QCoreApplication.translate("main", "directory")}, })
Known limitation: the parsing of Qt options inside QCoreApplication
and subclasses happens before QCommandLineParser
exists, so it can’t take it into account. This means any option value that looks like a builtin Qt option, will be treated by QCoreApplication
as a builtin Qt option. Example: --profile -reverse
will lead to QGuiApplication
seeing the -reverse option set, and removing it from arguments()
before QCommandLineParser
defines the profile
option and parses the command line.
How to Use QCommandLineParser in Complex Applications#
In practice, additional error checking needs to be performed on the positional arguments and option values. For example, ranges of numbers should be checked.
It is then advisable to introduce a function to do the command line parsing which takes a struct or class receiving the option values returning an enumeration representing the result. The dnslookup example of the QtNetwork module illustrates this:
class DnsQuery(): DnsQuery() : type(QDnsLookup.A) {} QDnsLookup.Type type nameServer = QHostAddress() name = QString() enum CommandLineParseResult CommandLineOk, CommandLineError, CommandLineVersionRequested, CommandLineHelpRequested def parseCommandLine(parser,query,errorMessage): parser.setSingleDashWordOptionMode(QCommandLineParser.ParseAsLongOptions) nameServerOption = QCommandLineOption("n", "The name server to use.", "nameserver") parser.addOption(nameServerOption) typeOption = QCommandLineOption("t", "The lookup type.", "type") parser.addOption(typeOption) parser.addPositionalArgument("name", "The name to look up.") helpOption = parser.addHelpOption() versionOption = parser.addVersionOption() if not parser.parse(QCoreApplication.arguments()): errorMessage = parser.errorText() return CommandLineError if parser.isSet(versionOption): return CommandLineVersionRequested if parser.isSet(helpOption): return CommandLineHelpRequested if parser.isSet(nameServerOption): nameserver = parser.value(nameServerOption) query.nameServer = QHostAddress(nameserver) if query.nameServer.isNull() or query.nameServer.protocol() == QAbstractSocket.UnknownNetworkLayerProtocol: errorMessage = "Bad nameserver address: " + nameserver return CommandLineError if parser.isSet(typeOption): typeParameter = parser.value(typeOption) type = typeFromParameter(typeParameter.toLower()) if type < 0: errorMessage = "Bad record type: " + typeParameter return CommandLineError query.type = QDnsLookup.Type(type) positionalArguments = parser.positionalArguments() if positionalArguments.isEmpty(): errorMessage = "Argument 'name' missing." return CommandLineError if positionalArguments.size() > 1: errorMessage = "Several 'name' arguments specified." return CommandLineError query.name = positionalArguments.first() return CommandLineOk
In the main function, help should be printed to the standard output if the help option was passed and the application should return the exit code 0.
If an error was detected, the error message should be printed to the standard error output and the application should return an exit code other than 0.
QCoreApplication.setApplicationVersion(QT_VERSION_STR) QCoreApplication.setApplicationName(QCoreApplication.translate("QDnsLookupExample", "DNS Lookup Example")) parser = QCommandLineParser() parser.setApplicationDescription(QCoreApplication.translate("QDnsLookupExample", "An example demonstrating the class QDnsLookup.")) query = DnsQuery() errorMessage = QString() switch (parseCommandLine(parser, query, errorMessage)) { elif currentMode == CommandLineOk: break elif currentMode == CommandLineError: fputs(qPrintable(errorMessage), stderr) fputs("\n\n", stderr) fputs(qPrintable(parser.helpText()), stderr) return 1 elif currentMode == CommandLineVersionRequested: printf("%s %s\n", qPrintable(QCoreApplication.applicationName()), qPrintable(QCoreApplication.applicationVersion())) return 0 elif currentMode == CommandLineHelpRequested: parser.showHelp() Q_UNREACHABLE()
A special case to consider here are GUI applications on Windows and mobile platforms. These applications may not use the standard output or error channels since the output is either discarded or not accessible.
On Windows, QCommandLineParser
uses message boxes to display usage information and errors if no console window can be obtained.
For other platforms, it is recommended to display help texts and error messages using a QMessageBox
. To preserve the formatting of the help text, rich text with <pre>
elements should be used:
switch (parseCommandLine(parser, &query, &errorMessage)) { case CommandLineOk: break; case CommandLineError: QMessageBox::warning(0, QGuiApplication::applicationDisplayName(), "<html><head/><body><h2>" + errorMessage + "</h2><pre>" + parser.helpText() + "</pre></body></html>"); return 1; case CommandLineVersionRequested: QMessageBox::information(0, QGuiApplication::applicationDisplayName(), QGuiApplication::applicationDisplayName() + ' ' + QCoreApplication::applicationVersion()); return 0; case CommandLineHelpRequested: QMessageBox::warning(0, QGuiApplication::applicationDisplayName(), "<html><head/><body><pre>" + parser.helpText() + "</pre></body></html>"); return 0; }
However, this does not apply to the dnslookup example, because it is a console application.
See also
- class PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser#
Constructs a command line parser object.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.SingleDashWordOptionMode#
This enum describes the way the parser interprets command-line options that use a single dash followed by multiple letters, as as -abc
.
Constant
Description
QCommandLineParser.ParseAsCompactedShortOptions
-abc
is interpreted as-a -b -c
, i.e. as three short options that have been compacted on the command-line, if none of the options take a value. Ifa
takes a value, then it is interpreted as-a bc
, i.e. the short optiona
followed by the valuebc
. This is typically used in tools that behave like compilers, in order to handle options such as-DDEFINE=VALUE
or-I/include/path
. This is the default parsing mode. New applications are recommended to use this mode.QCommandLineParser.ParseAsLongOptions
-abc
is interpreted as--abc
, i.e. as the long option namedabc
. This is how Qt’s own tools (uic, rcc…) have always been parsing arguments. This mode should be used for preserving compatibility in applications that were parsing arguments in such a way. There is an exception if thea
option has theShortOptionStyle
flag set, in which case it is still interpreted as-a bc
.See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.OptionsAfterPositionalArgumentsMode#
This enum describes the way the parser interprets options that occur after positional arguments.
Constant
Description
QCommandLineParser.ParseAsOptions
application argument --opt -t
is interpreted as setting the optionsopt
andt
, just likeapplication --opt -t argument
would do. This is the default parsing mode. In order to specify that--opt
and-t
are positional arguments instead, the user can use--
, as inapplication argument -- --opt -t
.QCommandLineParser.ParseAsPositionalArguments
application argument --opt
is interpreted as having two positional arguments,argument
and--opt
. This mode is useful for executables that aim to launch other executables (e.g. wrappers, debugging tools, etc.) or that support internal commands followed by options for the command.argument
is the name of the command, and all options occurring after it can be collected and parsed by another command line parser, possibly in another executable.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.addHelpOption()#
- Return type:
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Adds the help option (-h
, --help
and -?
on Windows) as well as an option --help-all
to include Qt-specific options in the output.
These options are handled automatically by QCommandLineParser
.
Remember to use setApplicationDescription
to set the application description, which will be displayed when this option is used.
Example:
if __name__ == "__main__": app = QCoreApplication(argc, argv) QCoreApplication.setApplicationName("my-copy-program") QCoreApplication.setApplicationVersion("1.0") parser = QCommandLineParser() parser.setApplicationDescription("Test helper") parser.addHelpOption() parser.addVersionOption() parser.addPositionalArgument("source", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Source file to copy.")) parser.addPositionalArgument("destination", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Destination directory.")) # A boolean option with a single name (-p) showProgressOption = QCommandLineOption("p", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Show progress during copy")) parser.addOption(showProgressOption) # A boolean option with multiple names (-f, --force) QCommandLineOption forceOption(QStringList() << "f" << "force", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Overwrite existing files.")) parser.addOption(forceOption) # An option with a value QCommandLineOption targetDirectoryOption(QStringList() << "t" << "target-directory", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Copy all source files into <directory>."), QCoreApplication.translate("main", "directory")) parser.addOption(targetDirectoryOption) # Process the actual command line arguments given by the user parser.process(app) args = parser.positionalArguments() # source is args.at(0), destination is args.at(1) showProgress = parser.isSet(showProgressOption) force = parser.isSet(forceOption) targetDir = parser.value(targetDirectoryOption) # ...
Returns the option instance, which can be used to call isSet()
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.addOption(commandLineOption)#
- Parameters:
commandLineOption –
PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineOption
- Return type:
bool
Adds the option option
to look for while parsing.
Returns true
if adding the option was successful; otherwise returns false
.
Adding the option fails if there is no name attached to the option, or the option has a name that clashes with an option name added before.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.addOptions(options)#
- Parameters:
options –
- Return type:
bool
Adds the options to look for while parsing. The options are specified by the parameter options
.
Returns true
if adding all of the options was successful; otherwise returns false
.
See the documentation for addOption()
for when this function may fail.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.addPositionalArgument(name, description[, syntax=""])#
- Parameters:
name – str
description – str
syntax – str
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Defines an additional argument to the application, for the benefit of the help text.
The argument name
and description
will appear under the Arguments:
section of the help. If syntax
is specified, it will be appended to the Usage line, otherwise the name
will be appended.
Example:
# Usage: image-editor file # # Arguments: # file The file to open. parser.addPositionalArgument("file", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "The file to open.")) # Usage: web-browser [urls...] # # Arguments: # urls URLs to open, optionally. parser.addPositionalArgument("urls", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "URLs to open, optionally."), "[urls...]") # Usage: cp source destination # # Arguments: # source Source file to copy. # destination Destination directory. parser.addPositionalArgument("source", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Source file to copy.")) parser.addPositionalArgument("destination", QCoreApplication.translate("main", "Destination directory."))See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.addVersionOption()#
- Return type:
Adds the -v
/ --version
option, which displays the version string of the application.
This option is handled automatically by QCommandLineParser
.
You can set the actual version string by using setApplicationVersion()
.
Returns the option instance, which can be used to call isSet()
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.applicationDescription()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the application description set in setApplicationDescription()
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.clearPositionalArguments()#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Clears the definitions of additional arguments from the help text.
This is only needed for the special case of tools which support multiple commands with different options. Once the actual command has been identified, the options for this command can be defined, and the help text for the command can be adjusted accordingly.
Example:
app = QCoreApplication(argc, argv) parser = QCommandLineParser() parser.addPositionalArgument("command", "The command to execute.") # Call parse() to find out the positional arguments. parser.parse(QCoreApplication.arguments()) args = parser.positionalArguments() command = args.isEmpty() if QString() else args.first() if command == "resize": parser.clearPositionalArguments() parser.addPositionalArgument("resize", "Resize the object to a size().", "resize [resize_options]") parser.addOption(QCommandLineOption("size", "New size.", "new_size")) parser.process(app) # ... /* This code results in context-dependent help: $ tool --help Usage: tool command Arguments: command The command to execute. $ tool resize --help Usage: tool resize [resize_options] Options: size <size> New size. = size <size> New size. - 1 Arguments: resize Resize the object to a size(). */
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.errorText()#
- Return type:
str
Returns a translated error text for the user. This should only be called when parse()
returns false
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.helpText()#
- Return type:
str
Returns a string containing the complete help information.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.isSet(option)#
- Parameters:
option –
PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineOption
- Return type:
bool
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
This is an overloaded function.
Checks whether the option
was passed to the application.
Returns true
if the option
was set, false otherwise.
This is the recommended way to check for options with no values.
Example:
app = QCoreApplication(argc, argv) parser = QCommandLineParser() verboseOption = QCommandLineOption("verbose") parser.addOption(verboseOption) parser.process(app) verbose = parser.isSet(verboseOption)
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.isSet(name)
- Parameters:
name – str
- Return type:
bool
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Checks whether the option name
was passed to the application.
Returns true
if the option name
was set, false otherwise.
The name provided can be any long or short name of any option that was added with addOption()
. All the options names are treated as being equivalent. If the name is not recognized or that option was not present, false is returned.
Example:
verbose = parser.isSet("verbose")
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.optionNames()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of option names that were found.
This returns a list of all the recognized option names found by the parser, in the order in which they were found. For any long options that were in the form {–option=value}, the value part will have been dropped.
The names in this list do not include the preceding dash characters. Names may appear more than once in this list if they were encountered more than once by the parser.
Any entry in the list can be used with value()
or with values()
to get any relevant option values.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.parse(arguments)#
- Parameters:
arguments – list of strings
- Return type:
bool
Parses the command line arguments
.
Most programs don’t need to call this, a simple call to process()
is enough.
parse() is more low-level, and only does the parsing. The application will have to take care of the error handling, using errorText()
if parse() returns false
. This can be useful for instance to show a graphical error message in graphical programs.
Calling parse() instead of process()
can also be useful in order to ignore unknown options temporarily, because more option definitions will be provided later on (depending on one of the arguments), before calling process()
.
Don’t forget that arguments
must start with the name of the executable (ignored, though).
Returns false
in case of a parse error (unknown option or missing value); returns true
otherwise.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.positionalArguments()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of positional arguments.
These are all of the arguments that were not recognized as part of an option.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.process(app)#
- Parameters:
This is an overloaded function.
The command line is obtained from the QCoreApplication
instance app
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.process(arguments)
- Parameters:
arguments – list of strings
Processes the command line arguments
.
In addition to parsing the options (like parse()
), this function also handles the builtin options and handles errors.
The builtin options are --version
if addVersionOption
was called and --help
/ --help-all
if addHelpOption
was called.
When invoking one of these options, or when an error happens (for instance an unknown option was passed), the current process will then stop, using the exit() function.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.setApplicationDescription(description)#
- Parameters:
description – str
Sets the application description
shown by helpText()
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.setOptionsAfterPositionalArgumentsMode(mode)#
- Parameters:
Sets the parsing mode to parsingMode
. This must be called before process()
or parse()
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.setSingleDashWordOptionMode(parsingMode)#
- Parameters:
parsingMode –
SingleDashWordOptionMode
Sets the parsing mode to singleDashWordOptionMode
. This must be called before process()
or parse()
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.showHelp([exitCode=0])#
- Parameters:
exitCode – int
Displays the help information, and exits the application. This is automatically triggered by the –help option, but can also be used to display the help when the user is not invoking the application correctly. The exit code is set to exitCode
. It should be set to 0 if the user requested to see the help, and to any other value in case of an error.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.showVersion()#
Displays the version information from applicationVersion()
, and exits the application. This is automatically triggered by the –version option, but can also be used to display the version when not using process()
. The exit code is set to EXIT_SUCCESS (0).
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.unknownOptionNames()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of unknown option names.
This list will include both long an short name options that were not recognized. For any long options that were in the form {–option=value}, the value part will have been dropped and only the long name is added.
The names in this list do not include the preceding dash characters. Names may appear more than once in this list if they were encountered more than once by the parser.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.value(option)#
- Parameters:
option –
PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineOption
- Return type:
str
This is an overloaded function.
Returns the option value found for the given option
, or an empty string if not found.
For options found by the parser, the last value found for that option is returned. If the option wasn’t specified on the command line, the default value is returned.
An empty string is returned if the option does not take a value.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.value(name)
- Parameters:
name – str
- Return type:
str
Returns the option value found for the given option name optionName
, or an empty string if not found.
The name provided can be any long or short name of any option that was added with addOption()
. All the option names are treated as being equivalent. If the name is not recognized or that option was not present, an empty string is returned.
For options found by the parser, the last value found for that option is returned. If the option wasn’t specified on the command line, the default value is returned.
An empty string is returned if the option does not take a value.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.values(option)#
- Parameters:
option –
PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineOption
- Return type:
list of strings
This is an overloaded function.
Returns a list of option values found for the given option
, or an empty list if not found.
For options found by the parser, the list will contain an entry for each time the option was encountered by the parser. If the option wasn’t specified on the command line, the default values are returned.
An empty list is returned if the option does not take a value.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QCommandLineParser.values(name)
- Parameters:
name – str
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of option values found for the given option name optionName
, or an empty list if not found.
The name provided can be any long or short name of any option that was added with addOption()
. All the options names are treated as being equivalent. If the name is not recognized or that option was not present, an empty list is returned.
For options found by the parser, the list will contain an entry for each time the option was encountered by the parser. If the option wasn’t specified on the command line, the default values are returned.
An empty list is returned if the option does not take a value.
See also