diff --git a/Doc/library/argparse.rst b/Doc/library/argparse.rst --- a/Doc/library/argparse.rst +++ b/Doc/library/argparse.rst @@ -920,6 +920,17 @@ >>> parser.parse_args(''.split()) Namespace(foo=42) +If the ``default`` value is a string, the parser parses the value as if it +were a command-line argument. In particular, the parser applies any type_ +conversion argument, if provided, before setting the attribute on the +:class:`Namespace` return value. Otherwise, the parser uses the value as is:: + + >>> parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() + >>> parser.add_argument('--length', default='10', type=int) + >>> parser.add_argument('--width', default=10.5, type=int) + >>> parser.parse_args() + Namespace(length=10, width=10.5) + For positional arguments with nargs_ equal to ``?`` or ``*``, the ``default`` value is used when no command-line argument was present:: @@ -958,6 +969,9 @@ >>> parser.parse_args('2 temp.txt'.split()) Namespace(bar=<_io.TextIOWrapper name='temp.txt' encoding='UTF-8'>, foo=2) +See the section on the default_ keyword argument for information on when the +``type`` argument is applied to default arguments. + To ease the use of various types of files, the argparse module provides the factory FileType which takes the ``mode=`` and ``bufsize=`` arguments of the :func:`open` function. For example, ``FileType('w')`` can be used to create a