diff --git a/Doc/library/optparse.rst b/Doc/library/optparse.rst index 1e66d4dec70..e4174007a3a 100644 --- a/Doc/library/optparse.rst +++ b/Doc/library/optparse.rst @@ -598,6 +598,20 @@ For example, if your script is called ``/usr/bin/foo``:: $ /usr/bin/foo --version foo 1.0 +The following two methods can be used to print and get the ``version`` string: + +.. method:: OptionParser.print_version(file=None) + + Print the version message for the current program (``self.version``) to + *file* (default stdout). As with :meth:`print_usage`, any occurrence + of ``"%prog"`` in ``self.version`` is replaced with the name of the current + program. Does nothing if ``self.version`` is empty or undefined. + +.. method:: OptionParser.get_version() + + Same as :meth:`print_version` but returns the version string instead of + printing it. + .. _optparse-how-optparse-handles-errors: @@ -1384,6 +1398,18 @@ OptionParser supports several other public methods: constructor keyword argument. Passing ``None`` sets the default usage string; use :data:`optparse.SUPPRESS_USAGE` to suppress a usage message. +.. method:: OptionParser.print_usage(file=None) + + Print the usage message for the current program (``self.usage``) to *file* + (default stdout). Any occurrence of the string ``"%prog"`` in ``self.usage`` + is replaced with the name of the current program. Does nothing if + ``self.usage`` is empty or not defined. + +.. method:: OptionParser.get_usage() + + Same as :meth:`print_usage` but returns the usage string instead of + printing it. + .. method:: OptionParser.set_defaults(dest=value, ...) Set default values for several option destinations at once. Using