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author | kotfu <kotfu@kotfu.net> | 2019-08-23 18:36:37 -0600 |
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committer | kotfu <kotfu@kotfu.net> | 2019-08-23 18:39:15 -0600 |
commit | 65cf54ae758bc1e036710c571f6c785820c7e10d (patch) | |
tree | 46390493ed1e710510a41200dba2c67d95fb554c /docs/features | |
parent | d6549c847a40e995dc6d6bcbf8ace1c121c4b0ee (diff) | |
download | cmd2-git-65cf54ae758bc1e036710c571f6c785820c7e10d.tar.gz |
command documentation for #765
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/features')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/features/commands.rst | 180 |
1 files changed, 158 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/docs/features/commands.rst b/docs/features/commands.rst index 6a8fedee..2cdc9851 100644 --- a/docs/features/commands.rst +++ b/docs/features/commands.rst @@ -3,45 +3,181 @@ Commands .. _cmd: https://docs.python.org/3/library/cmd.html -How to create a command with a ``do_command`` method, +``cmd2`` is designed to make it easy for you to create new commands. These +commmands form the backbone of your application. If you started writing your +application using cmd_, all the commands you have built will work when you move +to ``cmd2``. However, there are many more capabilities available in ``cmd2`` +which you can take advantage of to add more robust features to your commands, +and which makes your commands easier to write. Before we get to all the good +stuff, let's briefly discuss how to create a new command in your application. -Parsed statements ------------------ -``cmd2`` passes ``arg`` to a ``do_`` method (or ``default``) as a Statement, a -subclass of string that includes many attributes of the parsed input: +Basic Commands +-------------- + +The simplest ``cmd2`` application looks like this:: + + #!/usr/bin/env python + """A simple cmd2 application.""" + import cmd2 + + + class App(cmd2.Cmd): + """A simple cmd2 application.""" + + + if __name__ == '__main__': + import sys + c = App() + sys.exit(c.cmdloop()) + +This application subclasses ``cmd2.Cmd`` but has no code of it's own, so all +functionality (and there's quite a bit) is inherited. Lets create a simple +command in this application called ``echo`` which outputs any arguments given +to it. Add this method to the class:: + + def do_echo(self, line): + self.poutput(line) + +When you type input into the ``cmd2`` prompt, the first space delimited word is +treated as the command name. ``cmd2`` looks for a method called +``do_commandname``. If it exists, it calls the method, passing the rest of the +user input as the first argument. If it doesn't exist ``cmd2`` prints an error +message. As a result of this behavior, the only thing you have to do to create +a new command is to define a new method in the class with the appropriate name. +This is exactly how you would create a command using the cmd_ module which is +part of the python standard library. + +.. note:: + + See :ref:`features/generating_output:Generating Output` if you are + unfamiliar with the ``poutput()`` method. + + +Statements +---------- + +A command is passed one argument: a string which contains all the rest of the +user input. However, in ``cmd2`` this string is actually a ``Statement`` +object, which is a subclass of ``str`` to retain backwards compatibility. + +``cmd2`` has a much more sophsticated parsing engine than what's included in +the cmd_ module. This parsing handles: + +- quoted arguments +- output redirection and piping +- multi-line commands +- shortcut, macro, and alias expansion + +In addition to parsing all of these elements from the user input, ``cmd2`` also +has code to make all of these items work; it's almost transparent to you and to +the commands you write in your own application. However, by passing your +command the ``Statement`` object instead of just a plain string, you can get +visibility into what ``cmd2`` has done with the user input before your command +got it. You can also avoid writing a bunch of parsing code, because ``cmd2`` +gives you access to what it has already parsed. + +A ``Statement`` object is a subclass of ``str`` that contains the following +attributes: command - Name of the command called + Name of the command called. You already know this because of the method + ``cmd2`` called, but it can sometimes be nice to have it in a string, i.e. + if you want your error messages to contain the command name. args - The arguments to the command with output redirection - or piping to shell commands removed + A string containing the arguments to the command with output redirection or + piping to shell commands removed. It turns out that the "string" value of + the ``Statement`` object has all the output redirection and piping clauses + removed as well. Quotes remain in the string. command_and_args - A string of just the command and the arguments, with - output redirection or piping to shell commands removed + A string of just the command and the arguments, with output redirection or + piping to shell commands removed. argv - A list of arguments a-la ``sys.argv``, including - the command as ``argv[0]`` and the subsequent - arguments as additional items in the list. - Quotes around arguments will be stripped as will - any output redirection or piping portions of the command + A list of arguments a-la ``sys.argv``, including the command as ``argv[0]`` + and the subsequent arguments as additional items in the list. Quotes around + arguments will be stripped as will any output redirection or piping + portions of the command. raw - Full input exactly as typed. + Full input exactly as typed by the user. terminator - Character used to end a multiline command + Character used to end a multiline command. You can configure multiple + termination characters, and this attribute will tell you which one the user + typed. + +For many simple commands, like the ``echo`` command above, you can ignore the +``Statement`` object and all of it's attributes and just use the passed value +as a string. You might choose to use the ``argv`` attribute to do more +sophisticated argument processing. Before you go to far down that path, you +should check out the :ref:`features/argument_processing:Argument Processing` +functionality included with ``cmd2``. + + +Return Values +------------- + +Most commands should return nothing (either my omitting a ``return`` statement, +or by ``return None``. This indicates that your command is finished (with or +without errors), and that ``cmd2`` should prompt the user for more input. + +If you return ``True`` from a command method, that indicates to ``cmd2`` that +it should stop prompting for user input and cleanly exit. ``cmd2`` already +includes a ``quit`` command, but if you wanted to make another one called +``finis`` you could:: + + def do_finis(self, line): + """Exit the application""" + return True + + +Exit Codes +---------- + +``cmd2`` has basic infrastructure to support sh/ksh/csh/bash type exit codes. +The ``cmd2.Cmd`` object sets an ``exit_code`` attribute to zero when it is +instantiated. The value of this attribute is returned from the ``cmdloop()`` +call, so if you want to get an exit code back to the operating system shell, +you can do so like this:: + + #!/usr/bin/env python + """A simple cmd2 application.""" + import cmd2 + + + class App(cmd2.Cmd): + """A simple cmd2 application.""" + + def do_bail(self, line): + """Exit the application"" + self.poutput("fatal error, exiting") + self.exit_code = 2 + return true + if __name__ == '__main__': + import sys + c = App() + sys.exit(c.cmdloop()) +If the app was run from the `bash` operating system shell, then you would see +the following interaction:: -If ``Statement`` does not contain an attribute, querying for it will return -``None``. + (Cmd) bail + fatal error, exiting + $ echo $? + 2 -(Getting ``arg`` as a ``Statement`` is technically "free", in that it requires -no application changes from the cmd_ standard, but there will be no result -unless you change your application to *use* any of the additional attributes.) +Exception Handling +------------------ +You may choose you may choose to catch and handle any exceptions which occur in +a command method. If the command method raises an exception, ``cmd2`` will +catch it and display it for you. The `debug` :ref:`setting +<features/settings:Settings>` controls how the exception is displayed. If +`debug` is `false`, which is the default, ``cmd2`` will display the exception +name and message. If `debug` is `true`, ``cmd2`` will display a traceback, and +then display the exception name and message. |