plumbum
docopt
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plumbum | docopt | |
---|---|---|
5 | 29 | |
2,752 | 7,891 | |
- | 0.0% | |
7.2 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 24 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
plumbum
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Diagram as Code
if you liked that, you'll love Plumbum[1] :)
[1] https://github.com/tomerfiliba/plumbum
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Top python libraries/ frameworks that you suggest every one
plumbum
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Declarative command line parser library [Heated Arguments]
I wonder if you included plumbum in your comparison. For some reason, my long time favorite module for this (and more) always gets overlooked.
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NOT-fuzzy line pickers
You'll still have to juggle the input, but when using Python, plumbum offers a solid function for this: choose
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Pyshell, A Linux Subprocess Module for Python
It's kinda a nice thing. And the few people that need something like this are already using https://xon.sh/ or https://plumbum.readthedocs.io/ or https://ipython.org/ . You can have a look at these projects though. See what works and doesn't to guide the goals of your own project.
docopt
- Docopt: Command-line interface description language
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Building a Command Line Tool with PHP and Symfony Console
Symfony Console closely follows the well-established docopt conventions. Docopt, based on longstanding conventions from help messages and man pages, ensures a consistent and intuitive interface for describing a program's interface. Symfony Console's adherence to docopt conventions guarantees that your command line tools maintain a standardized and predictable user experience, simplifying development and user interaction.
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CLI user experience case study
You probably already know, but just in case you don't, you might read about http://docopt.org/ It seems to me a lot of your usage ideas could be refinements of / tooling around docopt-style interfaces.
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Gooey: Turn almost any Python command line program into a full GUI application
http://docopt.org/
Not quite what you asked for, but close: type example invocations to generate the CLI, and just pull the arguments from a dictionary at runtime.
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Things I've learned about building CLI tools in Python
I've been using docopt to handle CLI arguments for years now.
http://docopt.org/
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What's up, Python? The GIL removed, a new compiler, optparse deprecated
If you aren't averse to using a third party package, on my personal projects I always found https://github.com/docopt/docopt to be nice.
You can kill 2 birds with one stone by documenting your scripts while also providing the argument structure / parsing.
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adaszko/complgen: Generate {bash,fish,zsh} completions from a single EBNF-like grammar
As for the implementation differences, complgen uses a trivial DSL that’s everybody is already familiar with more or less because it’s a slightly more rigorous version of what tools usually spit out when you do command --help (projects like docopt even use that for command line arguments parsing). Those happen to be regular languages and therefore can be represented as a Deterministic Finite Automata. complgen compiles the grammars to DFAs, minimizes the DFA and spits out shell-specific shell completions scripts that simply walk the DFA to match and complete the current input.
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[Media] shrs: a shell that is configurable and extensible in rust
The current completion system has a list of rules of which completions to use at which time. It's purposely simple to make it as flexible as possible. The current things I'm planning is a derive macro like what clap has to generate these rules. I'm also considering introducing a plugin that let's you write rules in the format of docopt
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Docopt.sh – Command-Line Argument Parser for Bash 3.2, 4, and 5
For anyone unfamiliar, docopt is an established standard for specifying arguments in a script’s doc string. I use it for Python and it’s lovely. You’re going to write a docstring with examples anyway, why not make them functional?
http://docopt.org/
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I am sick of writing argparse boilerplate code, so I made "duckargs" to do it for me
I like http://docopt.org/ a lot. You seem like someone who might have opinions on that.
What are some alternatives?
click - Python composable command line interface toolkit
Python Fire - Python Fire is a library for automatically generating command line interfaces (CLIs) from absolutely any Python object.
asynccli - A CLI framework based on asyncio
typer - Typer, build great CLIs. Easy to code. Based on Python type hints.
escape - Simple Terminal Styling for Python
Gooey - Turn (almost) any Python command line program into a full GUI application with one line
asciimatics - A cross platform package to do curses-like operations, plus higher level APIs and widgets to create text UIs and ASCII art animations
Argh - An argparse wrapper that doesn't make you say "argh" each time you deal with it.
colorama - Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in Python
cement - Application Framework for Python