How to pass several list of arguments to @click.option

You can coerce click into taking multiple list arguments, if the lists are formatted as a string literals of python lists by using a custom option class like:

Custom Class:

import click
import ast

class PythonLiteralOption(click.Option):

    def type_cast_value(self, ctx, value):
        try:
            return ast.literal_eval(value)
        except:
            raise click.BadParameter(value)

This class will use Python's Abstract Syntax Tree module to parse the parameter as a python literal.

Custom Class Usage:

To use the custom class, pass the cls parameter to @click.option() decorator like:

@click.option('--option1', cls=PythonLiteralOption, default=[])

How does this work?

This works because click is a well designed OO framework. The @click.option() decorator usually instantiates a click.Option object but allows this behavior to be over ridden with the cls parameter. So it is a relatively easy matter to inherit from click.Option in our own class and over ride the desired methods.

In this case we over ride click.Option.type_cast_value() and then call ast.literal_eval() to parse the list.

Test Code:

@click.command(context_settings=dict(help_option_names=['-h', '--help']))
@click.option('--option1', cls=PythonLiteralOption, default=[])
@click.option('--option2', cls=PythonLiteralOption, default=[])
def cli(option1, option2):
    click.echo("Option 1, type: {}  value: {}".format(
        type(option1), option1))
    click.echo("Option 2, type: {}  value: {}".format(
        type(option2), option2))

# do stuff
if __name__ == '__main__':
    import shlex
    cli(shlex.split(
        '''--option1 '["o11", "o12", "o13"]' 
        --option2 '["o21", "o22", "o23"]' '''))

Test Results:

Option 1, type: <type 'list'>  value: ['o11', 'o12', 'o13']
Option 2, type: <type 'list'>  value: ['o21', 'o22', 'o23']

If you don't insist on passing something that looks like a list, but simply want to pass multiple variadic arguments, you can use the multiple option.

From the click documentation

@click.command()
@click.option('--message', '-m', multiple=True)
def commit(message):
    click.echo('\n'.join(message))
$ commit -m foo -m bar
foo
bar