Mats has mentioned the modules getopt and argparse etc. These are
primarily aimed at option parsing ("-v", "-o foo"). Your situation
occurs _after_ the option parsing (in your case, there are no options).
Alan has talked about explicitly checking the length of sys.argv, much
as you are doing,
On 1/26/19 1:20 AM, Asad wrote:
> Hi All ,
>
>I would like to know how do I make and option file as an argument on
> command propmnt in python
I don't know your context for asking this question. Alan has already
explained what you need to do for your issue, and whatever your needs it
is
On 26/01/2019 08:20, Asad wrote:
>At present I using :
>
> if len(sys.argv) == 3:
> first = sys.argv[1]
> second = sys.argv[2]
> else:
> print "enter the second argument"
> It works well for the following command :
> python test.py file1 file2
Correct because it tests if the
Hi All ,
I would like to know how do I make and option file as an argument on
command propmnt in python .
At present I using :
if len(sys.argv) == 3:
first = sys.argv[1]
second = sys.argv[2]
else:
print "enter the second argument"
It works well for the following comman