Parameters

Click supports two types of parameters for scripts: options and arguments. There is generally some confusion among authors of command line scripts of when to use which, so here is a quick overview of the differences. As its name indicates, an option is optional. While arguments can be optional within reason, they are much more restricted in how optional they can be.

To help you decide between options and arguments, the recommendation is to use arguments exclusively for things like going to subcommands or input filenames / URLs, and have everything else be an option instead.

Differences

Arguments can do less than options. The following features are only available for options:

  • automatic prompting for missing input

  • act as flags (boolean or otherwise)

  • option values can be pulled from environment variables, arguments can not

  • options are fully documented in the help page, arguments are not (this is intentional as arguments might be too specific to be automatically documented)

On the other hand arguments, unlike options, can accept an arbitrary number of arguments. Options can strictly ever only accept a fixed number of arguments (defaults to 1), or they may be specified multiple times using Multiple Options.

Parameter Types

Parameters can be of different types. Types can be implemented with different behavior and some are supported out of the box:

str / click.STRING:

The default parameter type which indicates unicode strings.

int / click.INT:

A parameter that only accepts integers.

float / click.FLOAT:

A parameter that only accepts floating point values.

bool / click.BOOL:

A parameter that accepts boolean values. This is automatically used for boolean flags. The string values “1”, “true”, “t”, “yes”, “y”, and “on” convert to True. “0”, “false”, “f”, “no”, “n”, and “off” convert to False.

click.UUID:

A parameter that accepts UUID values. This is not automatically guessed but represented as uuid.UUID.

class click.File(mode='r', encoding=None, errors='strict', lazy=None, atomic=False)

Declares a parameter to be a file for reading or writing. The file is automatically closed once the context tears down (after the command finished working).

Files can be opened for reading or writing. The special value - indicates stdin or stdout depending on the mode.

By default, the file is opened for reading text data, but it can also be opened in binary mode or for writing. The encoding parameter can be used to force a specific encoding.

The lazy flag controls if the file should be opened immediately or upon first IO. The default is to be non-lazy for standard input and output streams as well as files opened for reading, lazy otherwise. When opening a file lazily for reading, it is still opened temporarily for validation, but will not be held open until first IO. lazy is mainly useful when opening for writing to avoid creating the file until it is needed.

Starting with Click 2.0, files can also be opened atomically in which case all writes go into a separate file in the same folder and upon completion the file will be moved over to the original location. This is useful if a file regularly read by other users is modified.

See File Arguments for more information.

Parameters:
  • mode (str) –

  • encoding (str | None) –

  • errors (str | None) –

  • lazy (bool | None) –

  • atomic (bool) –

class click.Path(exists=False, file_okay=True, dir_okay=True, writable=False, readable=True, resolve_path=False, allow_dash=False, path_type=None, executable=False)

The Path type is similar to the File type, but returns the filename instead of an open file. Various checks can be enabled to validate the type of file and permissions.

Parameters:
  • exists (bool) – The file or directory needs to exist for the value to be valid. If this is not set to True, and the file does not exist, then all further checks are silently skipped.

  • file_okay (bool) – Allow a file as a value.

  • dir_okay (bool) – Allow a directory as a value.

  • readable (bool) – if true, a readable check is performed.

  • writable (bool) – if true, a writable check is performed.

  • executable (bool) – if true, an executable check is performed.

  • resolve_path (bool) – Make the value absolute and resolve any symlinks. A ~ is not expanded, as this is supposed to be done by the shell only.

  • allow_dash (bool) – Allow a single dash as a value, which indicates a standard stream (but does not open it). Use open_file() to handle opening this value.

  • path_type (type[t.Any] | None) – Convert the incoming path value to this type. If None, keep Python’s default, which is str. Useful to convert to pathlib.Path.

Changelog

Changed in version 8.1: Added the executable parameter.

Changed in version 8.0: Allow passing path_type=pathlib.Path.

Changed in version 6.0: Added the allow_dash parameter.

class click.Choice(choices, case_sensitive=True)

The choice type allows a value to be checked against a fixed set of supported values. All of these values have to be strings.

You should only pass a list or tuple of choices. Other iterables (like generators) may lead to surprising results.

The resulting value will always be one of the originally passed choices regardless of case_sensitive or any ctx.token_normalize_func being specified.

See Choice Options for an example.

Parameters:
  • case_sensitive (bool) – Set to false to make choices case insensitive. Defaults to true.

  • choices (cabc.Sequence[str]) –

class click.IntRange(min=None, max=None, min_open=False, max_open=False, clamp=False)

Restrict an click.INT value to a range of accepted values. See Range Options.

If min or max are not passed, any value is accepted in that direction. If min_open or max_open are enabled, the corresponding boundary is not included in the range.

If clamp is enabled, a value outside the range is clamped to the boundary instead of failing.

Changelog

Changed in version 8.0: Added the min_open and max_open parameters.

Parameters:
class click.FloatRange(min=None, max=None, min_open=False, max_open=False, clamp=False)

Restrict a click.FLOAT value to a range of accepted values. See Range Options.

If min or max are not passed, any value is accepted in that direction. If min_open or max_open are enabled, the corresponding boundary is not included in the range.

If clamp is enabled, a value outside the range is clamped to the boundary instead of failing. This is not supported if either boundary is marked open.

Changelog

Changed in version 8.0: Added the min_open and max_open parameters.

Parameters:
class click.DateTime(formats=None)

The DateTime type converts date strings into datetime objects.

The format strings which are checked are configurable, but default to some common (non-timezone aware) ISO 8601 formats.

When specifying DateTime formats, you should only pass a list or a tuple. Other iterables, like generators, may lead to surprising results.

The format strings are processed using datetime.strptime, and this consequently defines the format strings which are allowed.

Parsing is tried using each format, in order, and the first format which parses successfully is used.

Parameters:

formats (cabc.Sequence[str] | None) – A list or tuple of date format strings, in the order in which they should be tried. Defaults to '%Y-%m-%d', '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S', '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'.

Custom parameter types can be implemented by subclassing click.ParamType. For simple cases, passing a Python function that fails with a ValueError is also supported, though discouraged.

Parameter Names

Parameters (both options and arguments) have a name that will be used as the Python argument name when calling the decorated function with values.

Arguments take only one positional name. To provide a different name for use in help text, see Truncating Help Texts.

Options can have many names that may be prefixed with one or two dashes. Names with one dash are parsed as short options, names with two are parsed as long options. If a name is not prefixed, it is used as the Python argument name and not parsed as an option name. Otherwise, the first name with a two dash prefix is used, or the first with a one dash prefix if there are none with two. The prefix is removed and dashes are converted to underscores to get the Python argument name.

Implementing Custom Types

To implement a custom type, you need to subclass the ParamType class. Override the convert() method to convert the value from a string to the correct type.

The following code implements an integer type that accepts hex and octal numbers in addition to normal integers, and converts them into regular integers.

import click

class BasedIntParamType(click.ParamType):
    name = "integer"

    def convert(self, value, param, ctx):
        if isinstance(value, int):
            return value

        try:
            if value[:2].lower() == "0x":
                return int(value[2:], 16)
            elif value[:1] == "0":
                return int(value, 8)
            return int(value, 10)
        except ValueError:
            self.fail(f"{value!r} is not a valid integer", param, ctx)

BASED_INT = BasedIntParamType()

The name attribute is optional and is used for documentation. Call fail() if conversion fails. The param and ctx arguments may be None in some cases such as prompts.

Values from user input or the command line will be strings, but default values and Python arguments may already be the correct type. The custom type should check at the top if the value is already valid and pass it through to support those cases.