In Python, I understand how int and str arguments can be added to scripts.
parser=argparse.ArgumentParser(description=\"\"\"Mydescription\"\"\")
parser.add_argum
parser.add_argument('--foo', action='store_true')
import distutils.util
ARGP.add_argument('--on', '-o', type=distutils.util.strtobool, default='true')
Example calling it:
$ ./myscript # argp.on = 1
$ ./myscript --on=false # argp.on = 0
$ ./myscript --on=False # argp.on = 0
$ ./myscript --on=0 # argp.on = 0
$ ./myscript --on=1 # argp.on = 1
$ ./myscript -o0 # argp.on = 0
$ ./myscript -o false # argp.on == 0
i should mention, you can bind the argument to a local wrapper function too, to handle some other exact string matching if you want to support values like "yes" and "no". you can also try interpreting the input as yaml, which can handle yes/no too. i haven't done this in a while though, and i think lately I've suck to mutually exclusive arguments with the same dest value, one --no-option with action='store_false', and one --option with action='store_true'
You can either use the action with store_true|store_false, or you can use an int and let implicit casting check a boolean value.
Using the action, you wouldn't pass a --foo=true and --foo=false argument, you would simply include it if it was to be set to true.
python myProgram.py --foo
In fact I think what you may want is
parser.add_argument('-b', action='store_true', default=False)