In this section, we are going to learn about parsing arguments and the module used to parse arguments.
Parsing command-line arguments
Command-line arguments in Python
We can start a program with additional arguments, in the command line. Python programs can start with command-line arguments. Let's look at an example:
$ python program_name.py img.jpg
Here, program_name.py and img.jpg are arguments.
Now, we are going to use modules to get the arguments:
| 
 Module  | 
 Use  | 
 Python version  | 
| 
 optparse  | 
 Deprecated  | 
 < 2.7  | 
| 
 sys  | 
 All arguments in sys.argv (basic)  | 
 All  | 
| 
 argparse  | 
 Building a command-line interface  | 
 >= 2.3  | 
| 
 fire  | 
 Automatically generating Command-Line Interfaces (CLIs)  | 
 All  | 
| 
 docopt  | 
 Creating CLIs interfaces  | 
 >= 2.5  | 
Sys.argv
The sys module is used to access command-line parameters. The len(sys.argv) function contains the number of arguments. To print all of the arguments, simply execute str(sys.argv). Let's have a look at an example:
01.py
import sys
print('Number of arguments:', len(sys.argv))
print('Argument list:', str(sys.argv))
Output:
Python3 01.py img
Number of arguments 2
Arguments list: ['01.py', 'img']