Cool, thanks!
Nick Sergeant
www.nicksergeant.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(315) 719-2047
On Nov 14, 2008, at 8:29 AM, Jeff Forcier wrote:
I'm pretty sure this is because the current argument parsing code only
does keyword args, but I'm also pretty sure there's no big reason why
it cannot be extended to support args too. I'll make sure we at least
have this as a todo item, after checking to make sure it's not already
in with some sort of alternate syntax than what you tried (or broken).
-Jeff
On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 8:16 AM, Nick Sergeant
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Right now, my function is this:
def deploy(**kwargs):
...Some stuff...
I call the function like:
fab deploy:m='my subversion commit message'
However, it would be useful to simply call it like:
fab deploy:'my subversion committ message'
... if it is safe to assume I only need one argument (the commit
message).
Yet, when I set the function up like this:
def deploy(m):
...Some stuff...
and call it like:
fab deploy:'my subversion commit message'
I get:
TypeError: deploy() got an unexpected keyword argument 'my
subversion commit
message'
Thanks!
Nick Sergeant
www.nicksergeant.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(315) 719-2047
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