A Typehint based system for including flag input in your discord.py commands.
Why bother with numerous decorators and patched commands when you just typehint your input to receive command flags?
Usage is as simple as typehinting the entire input argument string to TypedFlags
, this in turn will convert everything and will return this argument as a dict
of key:value
pairs where each key
is the flag, and the value
is the value for that flag
from typed_flags import TypedFlags
@bot.command()
async def test(ctx, *, args: TypedFlags):
# Send all of command args
await ctx.send(args)
An example calling the above code:
%test this "Lol ez" --try:=test string --hard:=This is kinda cool
args = {'argless': ['this', 'Lol ez'], 'try': 'test string', 'hard': 'This is kinda cool'}
A further example: %test --try:=test string --hard:=lol This is kinda cool
args = {'try': 'test string', 'hard': 'lol This is kinda cool'}
Note: Since we have no argless arguments, it is not in the returned data
You can customize two things, the string to preceed any flag values as well as the string to split up between the flag and its value.
Both of these are keyword arguments when initializing TypedFlags
start
: str -> The string to preceed any flags (Defaults to--
)delim
: str -> What to split flags with to get thekey:value
split (Defaults to:=
)suppress_reserved_keyword
: boolean -> Whether to suppress errors on reserved keywords (Defaults toFalse
)- Currently
argless
is reserved - By default, if the user provides a flag called
argless
it raisesReservedKeyword
- If you set this to
True
it will overwriteargless
, this does mean you lose any arguments without a flag
- Currently
You do not have to provide these values. There are defaults in place. It is only for customization purposes
This package works in-line with how discord.py handles command parsing and consumption. That is to say the argument Hello world
will be two variables, where as the argument "Hello world"
will be parsed as one argument. This is something important to understand otherwise you will experience unexpected behaviour.
However, this only applies to 'argless' arguments. Values between flags are considered to be all part of said flag (See examples)
Any arguments not associated with a flag will be added to the dictionary under the key argless
. The value for this key is a list
containing all of the arguments found that do not corrospond to a given flag.
It is also important to note that if no argless
values are detected then this key will not be in the dictionary. You should check for this in your code.
Any arguments in argless
are ordered according to the order they were received.