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Home/ Questions/Q 6246023
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T12:36:51+00:00 2026-05-24T12:36:51+00:00

Background: I mostly run python scripts from the command line in pipelines and so

  • 0

Background:
I mostly run python scripts from the command line in pipelines and so my arguments are always strings that need to be type casted to the appropriate type. I make a lot of little scripts each day and type casting each parameter for every script takes more time than it should.

Question:
Is there a canonical way to automatically type cast parameters for a function?

My Way:
I’ve developed a decorator to do what I want if there isn’t a better way. The decorator is the autocast fxn below. The decorated fxn is fxn2 in the example. Note that at the end of the code block I passed 1 and 2 as strings and if you run the script it will automatically add them. Is this a good way to do this?

def estimateType(var):
    #first test bools
    if var == 'True':
            return True
    elif var == 'False':
            return False
    else:
            #int
            try:
                    return int(var)
            except ValueError:
                    pass
            #float
            try:
                    return float(var)
            except ValueError:
                    pass
            #string
            try:
                    return str(var)
            except ValueError:
                    raise NameError('Something Messed Up Autocasting var %s (%s)' 
                                      % (var, type(var)))

def autocast(dFxn):
    '''Still need to figure out if you pass a variable with kw args!!!
    I guess I can just pass the dictionary to the fxn **args?'''
    def wrapped(*c, **d):
            print c, d
            t = [estimateType(x) for x in c]
            return dFxn(*t)
    return wrapped

@autocast
def fxn2(one, two):

   print one + two 

fxn2('1', '2')      

EDIT: For anyone that comes here and wants the updated and concise working version go here:

https://github.com/sequenceGeek/cgAutoCast

And here is also quick working version based on above:

def boolify(s):
    if s == 'True' or s == 'true':
            return True
    if s == 'False' or s == 'false':
            return False
    raise ValueError('Not Boolean Value!')

def estimateType(var):
    '''guesses the str representation of the variables type'''
    var = str(var) #important if the parameters aren't strings...
    for caster in (boolify, int, float):
            try:
                    return caster(var)
            except ValueError:
                    pass
    return var

def autocast(dFxn):
    def wrapped(*c, **d):
            cp = [estimateType(x) for x in c]
            dp = dict( (i, estimateType(j)) for (i,j) in d.items())
            return dFxn(*cp, **dp)

    return wrapped

######usage######
@autocast
def randomFunction(firstVar, secondVar):
    print firstVar + secondVar

randomFunction('1', '2')
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T12:36:52+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 12:36 pm

    If you want to auto-convert values:

    def boolify(s):
        if s == 'True':
            return True
        if s == 'False':
            return False
        raise ValueError("huh?")
    
    def autoconvert(s):
        for fn in (boolify, int, float):
            try:
                return fn(s)
            except ValueError:
                pass
        return s
    

    You can adjust boolify to accept other boolean values if you like.

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