Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: scriptconfig
Version: 0.5.8
Summary: Easy dict-based script configuration with CLI support
Home-page: UNKNOWN
Author: Kitware Inc., Jon Crall
Author-email: kitware@kitware.com, jon.crall@kitware.com
License: Apache 2
Description: ScriptConfig
        ============
        
        .. # TODO Get CI services running on gitlab 
        .. #|CircleCI| |Travis| |Codecov| |ReadTheDocs|
        
        |GitlabCIPipeline| |GitlabCICoverage| |Appveyor| |Pypi| |Downloads| 
        
        
        +------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
        | Read the docs    | https://scriptconfig.readthedocs.io              |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
        | Gitlab (main)    | https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig    |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
        | Github (mirror)  | https://github.com/Kitware/scriptconfig          |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
        | Pypi             | https://pypi.org/project/scriptconfig            |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
        
        The main webpage for this project is: https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig
        
        The goal of ``scriptconfig`` is to make it easy to be able to define a CLI by
        **simply defining a dictionary**. Thie enables you to write simple configs and
        update from CLI, kwargs, and/or json.
        
        The ``scriptconfig`` provides a simple way to make configurable scripts using a
        combination of config files, command line arguments, and simple Python keyword
        arguments. A script config object is defined by creating a subclass of
        ``Config`` with a ``default`` dict class attribute. An instance of a custom
        ``Config`` object will behave similar a dictionary, but with a few
        conveniences.
        
        Installation
        ------------
        
        The `scriptconfig <https://pypi.org/project/scriptconfig/>`_.  package can be installed via pip:
        
        .. code-block:: bash
        
            pip install scriptconfig
        
        Example Script
        --------------
        
        Scriptconfig to define a flat configuration dictionary with values that can be
        specified via Python keyword arguments, command line parameters, or a yaml
        config file. Consider the following script that prints its config, opens a
        file, computes its hash, and then prints it to stdout.
        
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            import scriptconfig as scfg
            import hashlib
            import ubelt as ub
        
        
            class FileHashConfig(scfg.Config):
                """
                The docstring will be the description in the CLI help
                """
                default = {
                    'fpath': scfg.Value(None, position=1, help=ub.paragraph(
                        '''
                        a path to a file to hash
                        ''')),
                    'hasher': scfg.Value('sha1', choices=['sha1', 'sha512'], help=ub.paragraph(
                        '''
                        a name of a hashlib hasher'
                        ''')),
                }
        
        
            def main(**kwargs):
                config = FileHashConfig(default=kwargs, cmdline=True)
                print('config = {!r}'.format(config))
                fpath = config['fpath']
                hasher = getattr(hashlib, config['hasher'])()
        
                with open(fpath, 'rb') as file:
                    hasher.update(file.read())
        
                hashstr = hasher.hexdigest()
                print('The {hasher} hash of {fpath} is {hashstr}'.format(
                    hashstr=hashstr, **config))
        
        
            if __name__ == '__main__':
                main()
        
        
        
        If this script is in a module ``hash_demo.py``, it can be invoked in these
        following ways.
        
        Purely from the command line:
        
        .. code-block:: bash
        
            # Get help
            python hash_demo.py --help
        
            # Using key-val pairs
            python hash_demo.py --fpath=$HOME/.bashrc --hasher=sha1
        
            # Using a positional arguments and other defaults
            python hash_demo.py $HOME/.bashrc
        
        From the command line using a yaml config:
        
        .. code-block:: bash
        
            # Write out a config file
            echo '{"fpath": "hashconfig.json", "hasher": "sha512"}' > hashconfig.json
        
            # Use the special `--config` cli arg provided by scriptconfig
            python hash_demo.py --config=hashconfig.json
        
            # You can also mix and match, this overrides the hasher in the config with sha1
            python hash_demo.py --config=hashconfig.json --hasher=sha1
        
        
        Lastly you can call it from good ol' Python.
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            import hash_demo
            hash_demo.main(fpath=hash_demo.__file__, hasher='sha512')
            
        
        
        Project Design Goals
        --------------------
        
            * Write Python programs that can be invoked either through the commandline
              or via Python itself.
        
            * Drop in replacement for any dictionary-based configuration system.
        
            * Intuitive parsing (currently working on this), ideally improve on
              argparse if possible. This means being able to easilly specify simple
              lists, numbers, strings, and paths.
        
        To get started lets consider some example usage:
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            >>> import scriptconfig as scfg
            >>> # In its simplest incarnation, the config class specifies default values.
            >>> # For each configuration parameter.
            >>> class ExampleConfig(scfg.Config):
            >>>     default = {
            >>>         'num': 1,
            >>>         'mode': 'bar',
            >>>         'ignore': ['baz', 'biz'],
            >>>     }
            >>> # Creating an instance, starts using the defaults
            >>> config = ExampleConfig()
            >>> # Typically you will want to update default from a dict or file.  By
            >>> # specifying cmdline=True you denote that it is ok for the contents of
            >>> # `sys.argv` to override config values. Here we pass a dict to `load`.
            >>> kwargs = {'num': 2}
            >>> config.load(kwargs, cmdline=False)
            >>> assert config['num'] == 2
            >>> # The `load` method can also be passed a json/yaml file/path.
            >>> config_fpath = '/tmp/foo'
            >>> open(config_fpath, 'w').write('{"num": 3}')
            >>> config.load(config_fpath, cmdline=False)
            >>> assert config['num'] == 3
            >>> # It is possbile to load only from CLI by setting cmdline=True
            >>> # or by setting it to a custom sys.argv
            >>> config.load(cmdline=['--num=4'])
            >>> assert config['num'] == 4
            >>> # Note that using `config.load(cmdline=True)` will just use the
            >>> # contents of sys.argv
        
        
        Notice in the above example the keys in your default dictionary are command
        line arguments and values are their defaults.  You can augment default values
        by wrapping them in ``scriptconfig.Value`` objects to encapsulate information
        like help documentation or type information.
        
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            >>> import scriptconfig as scfg
            >>> class ExampleConfig(scfg.Config):
            >>>     default = {
            >>>         'num': scfg.Value(1, help='a number'),
            >>>         'mode': scfg.Value('bar', help='mode1 help'),
            >>>         'mode2': scfg.Value('bar', type=str, help='mode2 help'),
            >>>         'ignore': scfg.Value(['baz', 'biz'], help='list of ignore vals'),
            >>>     }
            >>> config = ExampleConfig()
            >>> # smartcast can handle lists as long as there are no spaces
            >>> config.load(cmdline=['--ignore=spam,eggs'])
            >>> assert config['ignore'] == ['spam', 'eggs']
            >>> # Note that the Value type can influence how data is parsed
            >>> config.load(cmdline=['--mode=spam,eggs', '--mode2=spam,eggs'])
        
        
        Features
        --------
        
        - Serializes to json
        
        - Dict-like interface. By default a ``Config`` object operates independent of config files or the command line.
        
        - Can create command line interfaces
        
          - Can directly create an independent argparse object 
        
          - Can use special command line loading using ``self.load(cmdline=True)``. This extends the basic argparse interface with:
           
              - Can specify options as either ``--option value`` or ``--option=value``
        
              - Default config options allow for "smartcasting" values like lists and paths
        
              - Automatically add ``--config``, ``--dumps``, and ``--dump`` CLI options
                when reading cmdline via ``load``.
        
        
        Gotchas
        -------
        
        CLI Values with commas:
        
            When using ``scriptconfig`` to generate a command line interface, it uses a
            function called ``smartcast`` to try to determine input type when it is not
            explicitly given. If you've ever used a program that tries to be "smart" you'll
            know this can end up with some weird behavior. The case where that happens here
            is when you pass a value that contains commas on the command line. If you don't
            specify the default value as a ``scriptconfig.Value`` with a specified
            ``type``, if will interpret your input as a list of values. In the future we
            may change the behavior of ``smartcast``, or prevent it from being used as a
            default.
        
        Boolean flags:
            
            ``scriptconfig`` is currently strictly key-value. It does not support
            boolean flags (e.g. ``--flag``), you must set it to a value (e.g.
            ``--flag=True``).
        
        
        FAQ
        ---
        
        Question: How do I override the default values for a scriptconfig object using json file?
        
        Answer:  This depends if you want to pass the path to that json file via the command line or if you have that file in memory already.  There are ways to do either. In the first case you can pass ``--config=<path-to-your-file>`` (assuming you have set the ``cmdline=True`` keyword arg when creating your config object e.g.: ``config = MyConfig(cmdline=True)``. In the second case when you create an instance of the scriptconfig object pass the ``default=<your dict>`` when creating the object: e.g. ``config = MyConfig(default=json.load(open(fpath, 'r')))``.  But the special ``--config`` ``--dump`` and ``--dumps`` CLI arg is baked into script config to make this easier.  
        
        
        Related Software
        ----------------
        
        Hydra - https://hydra.cc/docs/intro/#
        
        OmegaConf - https://omegaconf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html
        
        
        TODO
        ----
        
        - [ ] Policy on nested heirachies (currently disallowed)
        
        - [ ] Policy on smartcast (currently enabled)
        
        - [ ] Policy on positional arguments (currently experimental)
        
            - [ ] Fixed length
        
            - [ ] Variable length
        
            - [ ] Can argparse be modified to always allow for them to appear at the beginning or end?
        
            - [ ] Can we get argparse to allow a positional arg change the value of a prefixed arg and still have a sane help menu?
        
        - [ ] Policy on boolean flags (needs exploration)
        
        - [ ] Improve over argparse's default autogenerated help docs (needs exploration on what is possible with argparse and where extensions are feasible)
        
        
        .. |GitlabCIPipeline| image:: https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig/badges/master/pipeline.svg
           :target: https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig/-/jobs
        
        .. |GitlabCICoverage| image:: https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig/badges/master/coverage.svg?job=coverage
            :target: https://gitlab.kitware.com/utils/scriptconfig/commits/master
        
        .. # See: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/jon.crall/scriptconfig/settings/badges
        .. |Appveyor| image:: https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/br3p8lkuvol2vas4/branch/master?svg=true
           :target: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/jon.crall/scriptconfig/branch/master
        
        .. |Codecov| image:: https://codecov.io/github/Erotemic/scriptconfig/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github
           :target: https://codecov.io/github/Erotemic/scriptconfig?branch=master
        
        .. |Pypi| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/scriptconfig.svg
           :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/scriptconfig
        
        .. |Downloads| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/dm/scriptconfig.svg
           :target: https://pypistats.org/packages/scriptconfig
        
        .. |ReadTheDocs| image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/scriptconfig/badge/?version=latest
            :target: http://scriptconfig.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
Provides-Extra: all
Provides-Extra: tests
