Metadata-Version: 2.4
Name: dc-input
Version: 0.2.2
Summary: Interactively fill dataclass instances via the command line.
Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/jdvanwijk/dc-input
Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/jdvanwijk/dc-input
Author-email: Jan Ebel van Wijk <jan86@posteo.de>
License: MIT
License-File: LICENSE
Keywords: cli,dataclass,input,interactive,wizard
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Requires-Python: >=3.10
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# dc-input

[![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/dc-input.svg)](https://pypi.org/project/dc-input/)
[![License](https://img.shields.io/github/license/jdvanwijk/dc-input.svg)](LICENSE)

**Interactively fill dataclass instances via the command line.** 
Features include nested schemas, repeatable containers, undo support, defaults, optional fields, and custom parsers.
Useful for quick data entry, prototyping, or structured configuration; integrates easily with your own CLI tools.

---

## Why dc-input?
If you’ve ever written a script that prompts for input, validates values, and parses the result, you’ve probably 
noticed how boilerplate-y and bug-prone this can be.

`dc-input` replaces all that *with a single function call*.

## Installation
```bash
pip install dc-input
```
## Quick Start
```python
from dataclasses import dataclass
from dc_input import get_input

@dataclass
class User:
    name: str
    age: int | None

user = get_input(User)
print(user)
```

## Usage
Define your dataclasses as usual, then call `get_input()` to interactively collect values. 
`dc-input` walks your dataclass schema and interactively prompts for values, handling nesting, repetition, defaults, 
and validation automatically. At any prompt, type `..` to undo the previous input: this even works across nested schemas.


## Complete Example

Below is a full, self-contained script that:

- interactively collects data for a new music student
- validates and parses input
- appends the result to a JSON registry on disk

This is representative of how `dc-input` can be used in real projects.

### Script

```python
from __future__ import annotations

from dataclasses import dataclass, field, asdict
import datetime
import json
import os
from pathlib import Path
from pprint import pprint
import tempfile
from typing import Annotated, Any

from dc_input import get_input

STUDENTS_PATH = Path("students.json")


# ------------------------------------------------------------
# Schema
# ------------------------------------------------------------
@dataclass
class MusicStudent:
    id: int

    name: Name
    date_of_birth: Annotated[datetime.date, "DD/MM/YYYY"]
    address: Annotated[Address, "Must be a German address"]

    primary_instrument: Instrument
    secondary_instruments: Annotated[
        list[Instrument], "Other instruments the student may have experience with"
    ]

    comments: str | None


@dataclass
class Name:
    first: str
    middle: list[str]
    last: str

    full: str = field(init=False)

    def __post_init__(self):
        middle = f" {' '.join(name for name in self.middle)} " if self.middle else " "
        self.full = f"{self.first}{middle}{self.last}"


@dataclass
class Address:
    street: str
    street_number: int
    apartment: str | None
    zip_code: Annotated[int, "XXXXX"]
    city: str = "Berlin"


@dataclass
class Instrument:
    name: str
    start_date: Annotated[datetime.date | None, "DD/MM/YYYY"]
    comment: str | None


# ------------------------------------------------------------
# Helpers
# ------------------------------------------------------------
def parse_date_dmy(s: str) -> datetime.date:
    s = s.strip().replace(".", "/").replace("-", "/")
    try:
        day, month, year = map(int, s.split("/"))
    except Exception:
        raise ValueError("wrong format, must be DD/MM/YYYY")
    else:
        return datetime.date(year, month, day)


def json_default(obj: Any) -> Any:
    if isinstance(obj, datetime.date):
        return obj.isoformat()
    raise TypeError(f"Type not serializable: {type(obj)}")


# ------------------------------------------------------------
# Main function
# ------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    # Get input
    parsers = {
        datetime.date: parse_date_dmy,
    }
    res = get_input(MusicStudent, parsers=parsers)
    res_dict = asdict(res)  # dataclasses → JSON-serializable dict

    # Deserialize student registry
    data: dict[str, list] = {"students": []}
    if STUDENTS_PATH.exists():
        with open(STUDENTS_PATH, "r", encoding="utf-8") as f:
            data = json.load(f)

    # Add session result to deserialized registry
    data.setdefault("students", [])
    data["students"].append(res_dict)

    # Serialize registry back to JSON and overwrite old file
    with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(
            "w", encoding="utf-8", delete=False, dir=STUDENTS_PATH.parent
    ) as tmp:
        json.dump(data, tmp, indent=2, default=json_default)
        tmp_name = tmp.name

    os.replace(tmp_name, STUDENTS_PATH)

    # Done
    print(f"\nNew student '{res.name.full}' added to {STUDENTS_PATH.name}:")
    pprint(res)

```

### Interactive Session Example
[![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/767273.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/767273)


### Final Result
```
New student 'Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy' added to students.json:
MusicStudent(id=14321,
             name=Name(first='Jakob',
                       middle=['Ludwig', 'Felix'],
                       last='Mendelssohn Bartholdy',
                       full='Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy'),
             date_of_birth=datetime.date(1809, 2, 3),
             address=Address(street='Jägerstraße',
                             street_number=51,
                             apartment=None,
                             zip_code=10117,
                             city='Berlin'),
             primary_instrument=Instrument(name='piano',
                                           start_date=datetime.date(1816, 4, 30),
                                           comment=None),
             secondary_instruments=[Instrument(name='violin',
                                               start_date=None,
                                               comment=None),
                                    Instrument(name='ukulele',
                                               start_date=None,
                                               comment='student proclaimed '
                                                       '"uke is life", find out '
                                                       'what that means')],
             comments='seems v. talented')
```

## Roadmap
- Extensive testing (help welcome, see below!)
- Adapter for `attrs`
- Adapters for `pydantic` and `sqlalchemy` (if feasible) 
- Translations
- User-customizable UX


## Contributions
### Testing
Help with testing is very welcome.

For anyone so inclined: 
- create the craziest schema you can
- log the result
```python
    logging.basicConfig(level="DEBUG")
    logger = logging.getLogger("dc_input")
```
- if things go *boom* or don't seem quite right: open an issue at https://github.com/jdvanwijk/dc-input/issues with the debug logs and a copy of the interactive session. Thanks! 

### Suggestions
Over here: https://github.com/jdvanwijk/dc-input/discussions

### Pull Requests
This library is not open for PRs yet.

### Donations
I do like coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/janebelvanwijk
