Click Command Line Interfaces: Make options required if other optional option is unset
This can be done by building a custom class derived from click.Option
, and in that class over riding the click.Option.handle_parse_result()
method like:
Custom Class:
import click
class NotRequiredIf(click.Option):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.not_required_if = kwargs.pop('not_required_if')
assert self.not_required_if, "'not_required_if' parameter required"
kwargs['help'] = (kwargs.get('help', '') +
' NOTE: This argument is mutually exclusive with %s' %
self.not_required_if
).strip()
super(NotRequiredIf, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def handle_parse_result(self, ctx, opts, args):
we_are_present = self.name in opts
other_present = self.not_required_if in opts
if other_present:
if we_are_present:
raise click.UsageError(
"Illegal usage: `%s` is mutually exclusive with `%s`" % (
self.name, self.not_required_if))
else:
self.prompt = None
return super(NotRequiredIf, self).handle_parse_result(
ctx, opts, args)
Using Custom Class:
To use the custom class, pass the cls
parameter to click.option
decorator like:
@click.option('--username', prompt=True, cls=NotRequiredIf,
not_required_if='authentication_token')
How does this work?
This works because click is a well designed OO framework. The @click.option()
decorator usually instantiates a click.Option
object but allows this behavior to be overridden with the cls
parameter. So it is a relatively easy matter to inherit from click.Option
in our own class and over ride the desired methods.
In this case we over ride click.Option.handle_parse_result()
and disable the need to user/password
if authentication-token
token is present, and complain if both user/password
are authentication-token
are present.
Note: This answer was inspired by this answer
Test Code:
@click.command()
@click.option('--authentication-token')
@click.option('--username', prompt=True, cls=NotRequiredIf,
not_required_if='authentication_token')
@click.option('--password', prompt=True, hide_input=True, cls=NotRequiredIf,
not_required_if='authentication_token')
def login(authentication_token, username, password):
click.echo('t:%s u:%s p:%s' % (
authentication_token, username, password))
if __name__ == '__main__':
login('--username name --password pword'.split())
login('--help'.split())
login(''.split())
login('--username name'.split())
login('--authentication-token token'.split())
Results:
from login('--username name --password pword'.split())
:
t:None u:name p:pword
from login('--help'.split())
:
Usage: test.py [OPTIONS]
Options:
--authentication-token TEXT
--username TEXT NOTE: This argument is mutually exclusive with
authentication_token
--password TEXT NOTE: This argument is mutually exclusive with
authentication_token
--help Show this message and exit.
Slightly improved Stephen Rauch's answer to have multiple mutex parameters.
import click
class Mutex(click.Option):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.not_required_if:list = kwargs.pop("not_required_if")
assert self.not_required_if, "'not_required_if' parameter required"
kwargs["help"] = (kwargs.get("help", "") + "Option is mutually exclusive with " + ", ".join(self.not_required_if) + ".").strip()
super(Mutex, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def handle_parse_result(self, ctx, opts, args):
current_opt:bool = self.name in opts
for mutex_opt in self.not_required_if:
if mutex_opt in opts:
if current_opt:
raise click.UsageError("Illegal usage: '" + str(self.name) + "' is mutually exclusive with " + str(mutex_opt) + ".")
else:
self.prompt = None
return super(Mutex, self).handle_parse_result(ctx, opts, args)
use like this:
@click.group()
@click.option("--username", prompt=True, cls=Mutex, not_required_if=["token"])
@click.option("--password", prompt=True, hide_input=True, cls=Mutex, not_required_if=["token"])
@click.option("--token", cls=Mutex, not_required_if=["username","password"])
def login(ctx=None, username:str=None, password:str=None, token:str=None) -> None:
print("...do what you like with the params you got...")