Building command line applications with Click

I recommend click module to build command line applications. Like any other project from Armin Ronacher, it has great documentation. In this post, I am going to write a beginners tutorial, you should the read the documentation for any more details and examples.

Installation, and development tips

Using virtualenv is highly recommended for developing “click” applications. I am going to assume that we are in an empty directory and the continue from there. To start, we will have a simple hello.py file with the following content:

def cli():
    print("Hello World")

Now we will need a setup.py file. This will help us to use the python module we are writing as a command line tool. It is also the recommended way to write command line tools in python, then directly using shebang based scripts.

from setuptools import setup

setup(
    name="myhello",
    version='0.1',
    py_modules=['hello'],
    install_requires=[
        'Click',
    ],
    entry_points='''
        [console_scripts]
        myhello=hello:cli
    ''',
)

You can see that we mentioned the starting point of our tool in the entry_points, hello:cli points to the right function to start with. We can then install this on the virtualenv locally. I will also create the virtualenv below so that becomes easier others. To learn more, read this chapter later.

$ python3 -m venv env
$ source env/bin/activate
$ python3 -m pip install --editable .
Obtaining file:///home/kdas/code/practice/yoclick
Collecting Click (from myhello==0.1)
Using cached click-6.7-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: Click, myhello
Running setup.py develop for myhello
Successfully installed Click-6.7 myhello

$ myhello
Hello World

Now to convert the same script into a click based tool, we will make the following modifications:

import click

@click.command()
def cli():
    print("Hello World")

Now when we execute the command again, we see nothing changed visually, but it magically has a –help command line argument (which is optional).

$ myhello
Hello World
$ myhello --help
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS]

Options:
--help  Show this message and exit.

Using echo for printing text

The click module suggests using echo function to print, rather than the standard print function. So, we will make the required change in our code.

import click

@click.command()
def cli():
    click.echo("Hello World")

Boolean flags

In a command line tool, we sometimes want to have a boolean option. If the option is provided then do something, if not provided, then do something else. In our example, we will call the flag as –verbose, it is provided, then we will print some extra text.

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
def cli(verbose):
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello World")

We added another decorator to the cli function. In click.option() decorator, first we passed the flag using –verbose, then marked this option as a boolean flag, and then finally added the help text.

$ myhello --help
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS]

Options:
--verbose  Will print verbose messages.
--help     Show this message and exit.
$ myhello --verbose
We are in the verbose mode.
Hello World

By default, any boolean flag is treated as false.

Standard options in the command line

We can now add more options to our tool. For example, we will have a –name option which will take a string as input.

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
@click.option('--name', default='', help='Who are you?')
def cli(verbose,name):
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello World")
    click.echo('Bye {0}'.format(name))
$ myhello --help
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS]

Options:
--verbose    Will print verbose messages.
--name TEXT  Who are you?
--help       Show this message and exit.
$ myhello
Hello World
Bye
$ myhello --name kushal
Hello World
Bye kushal

Same option multiple times

We may want to take the same option multiple times. Click has a very simple way to do so.

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
@click.option('--name', '-n', multiple=True, default='', help='Who are you?')
def cli(verbose,name):
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello World")
    for n in name:
        click.echo('Bye {0}'.format(n))

In the above example, you can see that we specified the –name as a multiple options. It also means the name parameter in the cli function is now a tuple.

Help text for the script

We can add help text for the script using python docstrings. For example:

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
@click.option('--name', '-n', multiple=True, default='', help='Who are you?')
def cli(verbose,name):
    """This is an example script to learn Click."""
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello World")
    for n in name:
        click.echo('Bye {0}'.format(n))
$ myhello --help
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS]

This is an example script to learn Click.

Options:
--verbose        Will print verbose messages.
-n, --name TEXT  Who are you?
--help           Show this message and exit.

Super fast way to accept password with confirmation

Click provides a password_option() decorator, which can be used to accept a password over hidden prompt and second confirmation prompt. By the way, I am printing the password here as an example, never print the password to stdout in any tool.

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
@click.option('--name', '-n', multiple=True, default='', help='Who are you?')
@click.password_option()
def cli(verbose,name, password):
    """This is an example script to learn Click."""
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello World")
    for n in name:
        click.echo('Bye {0}'.format(n))
    click.echo('We received {0} as password.'.format(password))

The output looks like below:

$ myhello --help
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS]

This is an example script to learn Click.

Options:
--verbose        Will print verbose messages.
-n, --name TEXT  Who are you?
--password TEXT
--help           Show this message and exit.
$ myhello
Password:
Repeat for confirmation:
Hello World
We received hello as password.

To learn the full usage of password prompts, read this section.

Must have arguments

You can also add arguments to your tool. These are must haves, and if no default value is provided, they are assumed to be strings. In the below example, the script is expecting a county name to be specified.

import click

@click.command()
@click.option('--verbose', is_flag=True, help="Will print verbose messages.")
@click.option('--name', '-n', multiple=True, default='', help='Who are you?')
@click.argument('country')
def cli(verbose,name, country):
    """This is an example script to learn Click."""
    if verbose:
        click.echo("We are in the verbose mode.")
    click.echo("Hello {0}".format(country))
    for n in name:
        click.echo('Bye {0}'.format(n))

The output looks like:

$ myhello
Usage: myhello [OPTIONS] COUNTRY

Error: Missing argument "country".
$ myhello India
Hello India

Click has many other useful features, like yes parameter, file path input. I am not going to write about all of those here, but you can always read it from the upstream documentation.