Skip to content

beezz/click-repl

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

68 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

click-repl

image

In your click app:

import click
from click_repl import register_repl

@click.group()
def cli():
    pass

@cli.command()
def hello():
    click.echo("Hello world!")

register_repl(cli)

In the shell:

$ my_app repl
> hello
Hello world!
> ^C
$ echo hello | my_app repl
Hello world!

Features not shown:

  • Tab-completion.
  • The parent context is reused, which means ctx.obj persists between subcommands. If you're keeping caches on that object (like I do), using the app's repl instead of the shell is a huge performance win.
  • !-prefix executes shell commands.

You can use the internal :help command to explain usage.

PyPI: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/click-repl

Advanced Usage

For more flexibility over how your REPL works you can use the repl function directly instead of register_repl. For example, in your app:

import click
from click_repl import repl
from prompt_toolkit.history import FileHistory

@click.group()
def cli():
    pass

@cli.command()
def myrepl():
    prompt_kwargs = {
        'history': FileHistory('/etc/myrepl/myrepl-history'),
    }
    repl(click.get_current_context(), prompt_kwargs=prompt_kwargs)

And then your custom myrepl command will be available on your CLI, which will start a REPL which has its history stored in /etc/myrepl/myrepl-history and persist between sessions.

Any arguments that can be passed to the python-prompt-toolkit Prompt class can be passed in the prompt_kwargs argument and will be used when instantiating your Prompt.

License

Licensed under the MIT, see LICENSE.

About

Subcommand REPL for click apps

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 98.9%
  • Makefile 1.1%