bruno at modulix wrote: > News wrote: >> bruno at modulix wrote: >> >>> News wrote: >>> >>>> Hi everyone, >>>> >>>> My goal is to pull command switches/options from a file and then assign >>>> the values to select variables which would eventually be included in a >>>> class object. >>>> >>>> The data file looks something like this but the switches could be in any >>>> order and not all may be used. >>>> >>>> -m quemanager -s server -p port -k key -o object -c 20 -t [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>> Have you looked at optparse ? >>> >> I have. >> >> In the interactive version of the code, I use: >> >> # >> # Parse command line options and automatically build help/usage >> # >> parser = OptionParser() >> >> parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", >> action="store_false", dest="verbose", default=1, >> help="don't print status messages to stdout") >> parser.add_option("-m", dest="qmanager", >> help="Queue Manager to inquire against") >> parser.add_option("-s", dest="host", >> help="Host the que manager resides on") >> parser.add_option("-p", dest="port", >> help="Port queue manager listens on"), >> parser.add_option("-o", dest="object", >> help="Queue object being inquired on"), >> parser.add_option("-k", dest="key", >> help="object attribute to be inquired about"), >> parser.add_option("-t", type="string",dest="mto", >> help="e-mail address the report will go to"), >> parser.add_option("-d", action="store_false",dest="report", >> help="optional switch - enabling this sends output >> to e-mail") >> (options, args) = parser.parse_args() >> > > So why do you inflict yourself the pain of rewriting all the parsing etc??? > >> The module optparse seemed to be aimed at reading from commandline >> versus pulling attributes from a read line. > > http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.2/lib/optparse-parsing-arguments.html: > """ > The whole point of creating and populating an OptionParser is to call > its parse_args() method: > > (options, args) = parser.parse_args(args=None, options=None) > > where the input parameters are > > args > the list of arguments to process (sys.argv[1:] by default) > """ > > what about something like : > > line = myfile.readline() > options = parser.parse_args(line.split()) > > But what, if you prefer to rewrite (and maintain) a custom parser doing > exactly the same thing, please do !-) >
sometimes you can't see the forest .. trees and all that :) I really appreciate everyones insight on this. It was very helpful. OT: I saw several references to "OP". What does this mean? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list