Turn the timer setting on, and cmd2 will show the wall time it takes for each command to execute.
Like many shell applications, cmd2 applications can be exited by pressing Ctrl-D on an empty
line, or by executing the quit command.
Presents numbered options to user, as bash select.
app.select is called from within a method (not by the user directly; it is app.select, not
app.do_select).
::: cmd2.Cmd.select
def do_eat(self, arg):
sauce = self.select('sweet salty', 'Sauce? ')
result = '{food} with {sauce} sauce, yum!'
result = result.format(food=arg, sauce=sauce)
self.stdout.write(result + '\n')(Cmd) eat wheaties
1. sweet
2. salty
Sauce? 2
wheaties with salty sauce, yum!
See the do_eat method in the
read_input.py file for a
example of how to use `select.
cmd2 supports disabling commands during runtime. This is useful if certain commands should only be
available when the application is in a specific state. When a command is disabled, it will not show
up in the help menu or tab complete. If a user tries to run the command, a command-specific message
supplied by the developer will be printed. The following functions support this feature.
- [enable_command][cmd2.Cmd.enable_command] : Enable an individual command
- [enable_category][cmd2.Cmd.enable_category] : Enable an entire category of commands
- [disable_command][cmd2.Cmd.disable_command] : Disable an individual command and set the message that will print when this command is run or help is called on it while disabled
- [disable_category][cmd2.Cmd.disable_category] : Disable an entire category of commands and set the message that will print when anything in this category is run or help is called on it while disabled
See the definitions of these functions for descriptions of their arguments.
See the do_enable_commands() and do_disable_commands() functions in the
help_categories.py
example for a demonstration.