Upgrading optparse code
Originally, the argparse module had attempted to maintain compatibility with optparse. However, optparse was difficult to extend transparently, particularly with the changes required to support nargs=
specifiers and better usage messages. When most everything in optparse had either been copy-pasted over or monkey-patched, it no longer seemed practical to try to maintain the backwards compatibility.
The argparse module improves on the optparse module in a number of ways including:
Handling positional arguments.
Supporting subcommands.
Allowing alternative option prefixes like
+
and/
.Handling zero-or-more and one-or-more style arguments.
Producing more informative usage messages.
Providing a much simpler interface for custom
type
andaction
.
A partial upgrade path from optparse to argparse:
Replace all optparse.OptionParser.add_option() calls with ArgumentParser.add_argument() calls.
Replace
(options, args) = parser.parse_args()
withargs = parser.parse_args()
and add additional ArgumentParser.add_argument() calls for the positional arguments. Keep in mind that what was previously calledoptions
, now in the argparse context is calledargs
.Replace optparse.OptionParser.disable_interspersed_args() by using parse_intermixed_args() instead of parse_args().
Replace callback actions and the
callback_*
keyword arguments withtype
oraction
arguments.Replace string names for
type
keyword arguments with the corresponding type objects (e.g. int, float, complex, etc).Replace optparse.Values with Namespace and optparse.OptionError and optparse.OptionValueError with ArgumentError.
Replace strings with implicit arguments such as
%default
or%prog
with the standard Python syntax to use dictionaries to format strings, that is,%(default)s
and%(prog)s
.Replace the OptionParser constructor
version
argument with a call toparser.add_argument('--version', action='version', version='<the version>')
.