Skip to main content

Use Typer to define the CLI for your Django management commands.

Project description

django-typer

License: MIT Ruff PyPI version PyPI pyversions PyPI djversions PyPI status Documentation Status Code Cov Test Status Lint Status

Use static typing to define the CLI for your Django management commands with Typer. Optionally use the provided TyperCommand class that inherits from BaseCommand. This class maps the Typer interface onto a class based interface that Django developers will be familiar with. All of the BaseCommand functionality is preserved, so that TyperCommand can be a drop in replacement.

django-typer makes it easy to:

Please refer to the full documentation for more information.

django-typer example

🚨 Deprecation Notice

Imports from django_typer have been deprecated and will be removed in 3.0! Imports have moved to django_typer.management:

   # old way
   from django_typer import TyperCommand, command, group, initialize, Typer

   # new way!
   from django_typer.management import TyperCommand, command, group, initialize, Typer

Installation

  1. Clone django-typer from GitHub or install a release off PyPI:

    pip install django-typer
    

    rich is a powerful library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal. It is not required but highly recommended for the best experience:

    pip install "django-typer[rich]"
    
  2. Optionally add django_typer to your INSTALLED_APPS setting:

    INSTALLED_APPS = [
        ...
        'django_typer',
    ]
    

You only need to install django_typer as an app if you want to use the shell completion command to enable tab-completion or if you would like django-typer to install rich traceback rendering for you - which it does by default if rich is also installed.

Basic Example

TyperCommand is a very simple drop in replacement for BaseCommand. All of the documented features of BaseCommand work the same way!

from django_typer.management import TyperCommand

class Command(TyperCommand):
    def handle(self, arg1: str, arg2: str, arg3: float = 0.5, arg4: int = 1):
        """
        A basic command that uses Typer
        """

Or, you may also use an interface identical to Typer's. Simply import Typer from django_typer instead of typer.

from django_typer.management import Typer

app = Typer()

@app.command()
def main(arg1: str, arg2: str, arg3: float = 0.5, arg4: int = 1):
   """
   A basic command that uses Typer
   """

Basic Example

Multiple Subcommands Example

Commands with multiple subcommands can be defined:

   import typing as t

   from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
   from typer import Argument

   from django_typer.management import TyperCommand, command


   class Command(TyperCommand):
      """
      A command that defines subcommands.
      """

      @command()
      def create(
         self,
         name: t.Annotated[str, Argument(help=_("The name of the object to create."))],
      ):
         """
         Create an object.
         """

      @command()
      def delete(
         self, id: t.Annotated[int, Argument(help=_("The id of the object to delete."))]
      ):
         """
         Delete an object.
         """

Or using the typer-style interface this could be written:

from django_typer.management import Typer
import typing as t

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from typer import Argument

app = Typer(help="A command that defines subcommands.")

@app.command()
def create(
   name: t.Annotated[str, Argument(help=_("The name of the object to create."))],
):
   """
   Create an object.
   """

@app.command()
def delete(
   id: t.Annotated[int, Argument(help=_("The id of the object to delete."))]
):
   """
   Delete an object.
   """

Multiple Subcommands Example Multiple Subcommands Example - create Multiple Subcommands Example - delete

Grouping and Hierarchies Example

More complex groups and subcommand hierarchies can be defined. For example, this command defines a group of commands called math, with subcommands divide and multiply. The group has a common initializer that optionally sets a float precision value. We would invoke this command like so:

./manage.py hierarchy math --precision 5 divide 10 2.1
./manage.py hierarchy math multiply 10 2

Using the class-based interface we could define the command like this:

   import typing as t
   from functools import reduce

   from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
   from typer import Argument, Option

   from django_typer.management import TyperCommand, group


   class Command(TyperCommand):

      help = _("A more complex command that defines a hierarchy of subcommands.")

      precision = 2

      @group(help=_("Do some math at the given precision."))
      def math(
         self,
         precision: t.Annotated[
            int, Option(help=_("The number of decimal places to output."))
         ] = precision,
      ):
         self.precision = precision

      # helps can be passed to the decorators
      @math.command(help=_("Multiply the given numbers."))
      def multiply(
         self,
         numbers: t.Annotated[
            t.List[float], Argument(help=_("The numbers to multiply"))
         ],
      ):
         return f"{reduce(lambda x, y: x * y, [1, *numbers]):.{self.precision}f}"

      # or if no help is supplied to the decorators, the docstring if present
      # will be used!
      @math.command()
      def divide(
         self,
         numerator: t.Annotated[float, Argument(help=_("The numerator"))],
         denominator: t.Annotated[float, Argument(help=_("The denominator"))],
         floor: t.Annotated[bool, Option(help=_("Use floor division"))] = False,
      ):
         """
         Divide the given numbers.
         """
         if floor:
               return str(numerator // denominator)
         return f"{numerator / denominator:.{self.precision}f}"

The typer-style interface builds a TyperCommand class for us that allows you to optionally accept the self argument in your commands. We could define the above command using the typer interface like this:

import typing as t
from functools import reduce

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from typer import Argument, Option

from django_typer.management import Typer


app = Typer(help=_("A more complex command that defines a hierarchy of subcommands."))


math_grp = Typer(help=_("Do some math at the given precision."))

app.add_typer(math_grp)

@math_grp.callback()
def math(
   self,
   precision: t.Annotated[
      int, Option(help=_("The number of decimal places to output."))
   ] = 2,
):
   self.precision = precision


@math_grp.command(help=_("Multiply the given numbers."))
def multiply(
   self,
   numbers: t.Annotated[
      t.List[float], Argument(help=_("The numbers to multiply"))
   ],
):
   return f"{reduce(lambda x, y: x * y, [1, *numbers]):.{self.precision}f}"

@math_grp.command()
def divide(
   self,
   numerator: t.Annotated[float, Argument(help=_("The numerator"))],
   denominator: t.Annotated[float, Argument(help=_("The denominator"))],
   floor: t.Annotated[bool, Option(help=_("Use floor division"))] = False,
):
   """
   Divide the given numbers.
   """
   if floor:
         return str(numerator // denominator)
   return f"{numerator / denominator:.{self.precision}f}"

Grouping and Hierarchies Example Grouping and Hierarchies Example - math Grouping and Hierarchies Example - math multiply Grouping and Hierarchies Example - math divide

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django_typer-2.1.1.tar.gz (54.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

django_typer-2.1.1-py3-none-any.whl (55.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file django_typer-2.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django_typer-2.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 54.4 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.12.2 Darwin/23.5.0

File hashes

Hashes for django_typer-2.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 258e2212fd28e4e8682c9eadfe82bc4dacb5783bf4256c0afde4949d57f1390b
MD5 f2986e77d621816acb516d8894ff2a1a
BLAKE2b-256 f4299cd29bf54f4d7dcd580a7e41b9119399cbdf4eb6fdcad70037fc7f87bd6c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file django_typer-2.1.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django_typer-2.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 55.7 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.12.2 Darwin/23.5.0

File hashes

Hashes for django_typer-2.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 dec999a034d63ab289c10f5cc21b1dcf39c0d4582bd5b514eec55fb15b55ba23
MD5 7005605c5ef7a542fcab00c48f343992
BLAKE2b-256 bc7c780b1ae31a2989e7abc0486b256868d38df0de24c09aaba7c65b68f81eb7

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page