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wuttjamaican/docs/narr/cli/custom.rst

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Custom Commands
===============
WuttJamaican comes with :doc:`/narr/cli/builtin`.
Using the same framework, each :term:`package` can define additional
top-level :term:`command(s)<command>` and
:term:`subcommands<subcommand>` as needed.
Top-Level Command
-----------------
You must "define" *and* "register" your top-level command. Assuming a
basic Poser example:
.. code-block:: none
poser-project
├── poser
│ ├── __init__.py
│ └── cli.py
└── pyproject.toml
Add the command definition to the ``poser.cli`` module::
from wuttjamaican.cli import make_typer
poser_typer = make_typer(
name='poser',
help="Poser - the killer app"
)
Then register the command as script in ``pyproject.toml``:
.. code-block:: toml
[project.scripts]
poser = "poser.cli:poser_typer"
Then reinstall your project:
.. code-block:: sh
pip install -e ~/src/poser
And now you can run your command:
.. code-block:: sh
poser --help
But it won't really do anything until you add subcommands.
Subcommands
-----------
You must "define" the subcommand of course, but do not need to
"register" it. (That happens via function decorator; see below.)
However you *do* need to ensure all modules containing subcommands are
"eagerly imported" so the runtime discovery process finds everything.
Here we'll define the ``poser hello`` subcommand, by adding it to our
``poser.cli`` module (from example above)::
import sys
import typer
from wuttjamaican.cli import make_typer
# top-level command
poser_typer = make_typer(
name='poser',
help="Poser - the killer app"
)
# nb. function decorator will auto-register the subcommand
@poser_typer.command()
def hello(
ctx: typer.Context,
):
"""
Hello world example
"""
config = ctx.parent.wutta_config
app = config.get_app()
name = config.get('hello.name', default="WhoAreYou")
sys.stdout.write(f'hello {name}\n')
title = app.get_title()
sys.stdout.write(f'from {title}\n')
# TODO: you may need to import other modules here, if they contain
# subcommands and would not be automatically imported otherwise.
# nb. *this* current module *is* automatically imported, only
# because of the top-level command registration in pyproject.toml
No need to re-install, you can now use the subcommand:
.. code-block:: sh
poser hello --help