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Interactive command-line programs need to query users for information, be it text, choices from a list, or simple yes-or-no answers. qanda is a Python module of simple functions to prompt users for such information, allowing validation and cleanup of answers, default responses, consistent formatting and presentation of help text, hints and choices. It is not a replacement for textual interfaces like curses and urwid, but intended solely for simple console scripts with user input is required.
The simplest way to install qanda is via easy_install
or an equivalent
program::
% easy_install qanda
Alternatively the tarball can be downloaded, unpacked and setup.py
run::
% tar zxvf qanda.tgz
% cd qanda
% python set.py install
qanda has no requisites and should work with just about any version of Python.
Examples
::
>>> from qanda import prompt
>>> prompt.string ("What is your name")
What is your name: Foo
>>> fname = prompt.string ("Your friends name is",
help="I need to know your friends name as well before I talk to you.",
hints="first name",
default='Bar',
)
I need to know your friends name as well before I talk to you.
Your friends name is (first name) [Bar]:
>>> print fname
Bar
>>> years = prompt.integer ("And what is your age", min=1, max=100)
And what is your age: 101
A problem: 101 is higher than 100. Try again ...
And what is your age: 28
Central concepts
qanda packages all question-asking methods in a Session class. This allows
the appearance and functioning of all these methods to be handled consistently
and modified centrally. However, you don't necessarily have to create a Session
to use it - there's pre-existing Session in the variable called prompt
::
>>> from qanda import Session
>>> s = Session()
>>> from qanda import prompt
>>> type (prompt)
<class 'qanda.session.Session'>
The question methods are named after the type of data they elicit::
>>> print type(prompt.integer ("Pick a number"))
Pick a number: 2
<type 'int'>
>>> print type(prompt.string ("Pick a name"))
Pick a name: Bob
<type 'string'>
Many of the question methods with accept a list of "converters", each of which is used to sucessively transform or validate user input. If input fails validation, the question is posed again. qanda supplies a number of basic validators:
ToInt, ToFloat Convert inputs to other types Regex nly allow values that match a certain pattern Range Check that input falls within given bounds Length Check that input length falls within given bounds Synonyms Map values to other values Vocab Ensure values fall within a fixed set
.. [qanda-home] qanda home page http://www.agapow.net/software/py-qanda
.. [qanda-pypi] qanda on PyPi
v0.1dev (20110624)
* Initial release, sure to be buggy and incomplete
FAQs
Simple text prompts and validation for user input
We found that qanda demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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