I am trying to parse a command line using argparse
from argparse import ArgumentParser
argparser = ArgumentParser(prog="parse", description="desc")
create.add_argument("--name",dest="name",required=True,help="Name for element")
args = argparser.parse_args()
print(args)
When I execute this with below command
python argparser.py --name "input$output$"
The output is:
('args:', Namespace(name='input$'))
Expected Output:
('args:', Namespace(name='input$output$'))
Can you please help figure out what am I doing wrong ? Why argparse stops parsing after encountering a special char?
This is because most shells consider strings starting with $ as a variable, and when quoted with double quotes, the shell tries to replace it with its value.
Jut open a terminal/console and type this in the shell (this works in both bash and fish):
echo "hi$test" # prints hi trying to interpolate the variables 'test'
echo 'hi$test' # prints hi$test no interpolation for single quotes
This happens before the shell starts application processes. So I think when calling your application, you'd need to pass in the string quoted by single quotes, or escape the $ with a backslash.
echo "hi\$test" # prints hi$test since $ is escaped
If you want to see what Python actually receives from the shell as an argument, directly inspect sys.argv (that's where argparse and other modules a like read the command line arguments).
import sys
print sys.argv
In this specific case in the question, what happens is that your shell parses the input$output$ and tries to interpolate the variable $output, but there no such variable defined, so it gets replaced by an empty string. So what is actually being passed to Python as the argument is input$ (the last dollar sign stays in there because it's just a single dollar sign and can not be the name of a variable).
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