⚠ Please be sure to read the entire README, it explains some important tricks.
A util for discord.py bots that allow passing flags into commands.
To install, run the following command:
pip install discord-flags
You can install the legacy parser by running:
pip install discord-flags==1.5.2
2.1.0 changes how signatures appear. If you wish to use
the legacy signatures, use command.old_signature
instead.
Basic example usage:
import discord
from discord.ext import flags, commands
bot = commands.Bot("!")
# Invocation: !flags --count=5 --string "hello world" --user Xua --thing y
@flags.add_flag("--count", type=int, default=10)
@flags.add_flag("--string", default="hello!")
@flags.add_flag("--user", type=discord.User)
@flags.add_flag("--thing", type=bool)
@flags.command()
async def flags(ctx, **flags):
await ctx.send("--count={count!r}, --string={string!r}, --user={user!r}, --thing={thing!r}".format(**flags))
bot.add_command(flags)
Important note that @flags.command
MUST be under all @flags.add_flag
decorators.
@flags.add_flag
takes the same arguments as argparse.ArgumentParser.add_argument
to keep things simple.
Subcommands are just as simple:
@commands.group()
async def my_group(ctx):
...
@flags.add_flag("-n")
@my_group.command(cls=flags.FlagCommand)
async def my_subcommand(ctx, **flags):
...
Usage of discord.py's consume rest
behaviour is not perfect with discord-flags
,
meaning that you have to use a flag workaround:
@flags.add_flag("message", nargs="+")
@flags.command()
async def my_command(ctx, arg1, **options):
""" You can now access `message` via `options['message']` """
message = ' '.join(options['message'])