args 0.12.2+5 args: ^0.12.2+5 copied to clipboard
Library for defining parsers for parsing raw command-line arguments into a set of options and values using GNU and POSIX style options.
Parses raw command-line arguments into a set of options and values.
This library supports GNU and POSIX style options, and it works in both server-side and client-side apps.
Defining options #
First create an ArgParser:
var parser = new ArgParser();
Then define a set of options on that parser using addOption() and addFlag(). Here's the minimal way to create an option named "name":
parser.addOption('name');
When an option can only be set or unset (as opposed to taking a string value), use a flag:
parser.addFlag('name');
Flag options, by default, accept a 'no-' prefix to negate the option. You can
disable the 'no-' prefix using the negatable
parameter:
parser.addFlag('name', negatable: false);
Note: From here on out, "option" refers to both regular options and flags. In cases where the distinction matters, we'll use "non-flag option."
Options can have an optional single-character abbreviation, specified with the
abbr
parameter:
parser.addOption('mode', abbr: 'm');
parser.addFlag('verbose', abbr: 'v');
Options can also have a default value, specified with the defaultsTo
parameter. The default value is used when arguments don't specify the option.
parser.addOption('mode', defaultsTo: 'debug');
parser.addFlag('verbose', defaultsTo: false);
The default value for non-flag options can be any string. For flags, it must
be a bool
.
To validate a non-flag option, you can use the allowed
parameter to provide an
allowed set of values. When you do, the parser throws a [FormatException] if the
value for an option is not in the allowed set. Here's an example of specifying
allowed values:
parser.addOption('mode', allowed: ['debug', 'release']);
You can use the callback
parameter to associate a function with an option.
Later, when parsing occurs, the callback function is invoked with the value of
the option:
parser.addOption('mode', callback: (mode) => print('Got mode $mode'));
parser.addFlag('verbose', callback: (verbose) {
if (verbose) print('Verbose');
});
The callbacks for all options are called whenever a set of arguments is parsed.
If an option isn't provided in the args, its callback is passed the default
value, or null
if no default value is set.
Parsing arguments #
Once you have an ArgParser set up with some options and flags, you use it by calling ArgParser.parse() with a set of arguments:
var results = parser.parse(['some', 'command', 'line', 'args']);
These arguments usually come from the arguments to main()
. For example:
main(List<String> args) {
// ...
var results = parser.parse(args);
}
However, you can pass in any list of strings. The parse()
method returns an
instance of ArgResults, a map-like object that contains the values of the
parsed options.
var parser = new ArgParser();
parser.addOption('mode');
parser.addFlag('verbose', defaultsTo: true);
var results = parser.parse(['--mode', 'debug', 'something', 'else']);
print(results['mode']); // debug
print(results['verbose']); // true
By default, the parse()
method stops as soon as it reaches --
by itself or
anything that the parser doesn't recognize as an option, flag, or option value.
If arguments still remain, they go into ArgResults.rest.
print(results.rest); // ['something', 'else']
To continue to parse options found after non-option arguments, pass
allowTrailingOptions: true
when creating the ArgParser.
Specifying options #
To actually pass in options and flags on the command line, use GNU or POSIX style. Consider this option:
parser.addOption('name', abbr: 'n');
You can specify its value on the command line using any of the following:
--name=somevalue
--name somevalue
-nsomevalue
-n somevalue
Consider this flag:
parser.addFlag('name', abbr: 'n');
You can set it to true using one of the following:
--name
-n
You can set it to false using the following:
--no-name
Multiple flag abbreviations can be collapsed into a single argument. Say you define these flags:
parser
..addFlag('verbose', abbr: 'v')
..addFlag('french', abbr: 'f')
..addFlag('iambic-pentameter', abbr: 'i');
You can set all three flags at once:
-vfi
By default, an option has only a single value, with later option values overriding earlier ones; for example:
var parser = new ArgParser();
parser.addOption('mode');
var results = parser.parse(['--mode', 'on', '--mode', 'off']);
print(results['mode']); // prints 'off'
If you need multiple values, set the allowMultiple
parameter. In that case the
option can occur multiple times, and the parse()
method returns a list of
values:
var parser = new ArgParser();
parser.addOption('mode', allowMultiple: true);
var results = parser.parse(['--mode', 'on', '--mode', 'off']);
print(results['mode']); // prints '[on, off]'
Defining commands #
In addition to options, you can also define commands. A command is a named argument that has its own set of options. For example, consider this shell command:
$ git commit -a
The executable is git
, the command is commit
, and the -a
option is an
option passed to the command. You can add a command using the addCommand
method:
var parser = new ArgParser();
var command = parser.addCommand('commit');
It returns another ArgParser, which you can then use to define options specific to that command. If you already have an ArgParser for the command's options, you can pass it in:
var parser = new ArgParser();
var command = new ArgParser();
parser.addCommand('commit', command);
The ArgParser for a command can then define options or flags:
command.addFlag('all', abbr: 'a');
You can add multiple commands to the same parser so that a user can select one from a range of possible commands. When parsing an argument list, you can then determine which command was entered and what options were provided for it.
var results = parser.parse(['commit', '-a']);
print(results.command.name); // "commit"
print(results.command['all']); // true
Options for a command must appear after the command in the argument list. For
example, given the above parser, "git -a commit"
is not valid. The parser
tries to find the right-most command that accepts an option. For example:
var parser = new ArgParser();
parser.addFlag('all', abbr: 'a');
var command = parser.addCommand('commit');
command.addFlag('all', abbr: 'a');
var results = parser.parse(['commit', '-a']);
print(results.command['all']); // true
Here, both the top-level parser and the "commit"
command can accept a "-a"
(which is probably a bad command line interface, admittedly). In that case, when
"-a"
appears after "commit"
, it is applied to that command. If it appears to
the left of "commit"
, it is given to the top-level parser.
Dispatching Commands #
If you're writing a command-based application, you can use the CommandRunner
and Command classes to help structure it. CommandRunner has built-in
support for dispatching to Commands based on command-line arguments, as well
as handling --help
flags and invalid arguments. For example:
var runner = new CommandRunner("git", "Distributed version control.")
..addCommand(new CommitCommand())
..addCommand(new StashCommand())
..run(['commit', '-a']); // Calls [CommitCommand.run()]
Custom commands are defined by extending the Command class. For example:
class CommitCommand extends Command {
// The [name] and [description] properties must be defined by every
// subclass.
final name = "commit";
final description = "Record changes to the repository.";
CommitCommand() {
// [argParser] is automatically created by the parent class.
argParser.addFlag('all', abbr: 'a');
}
// [run] may also return a Future.
void run() {
// [options] is set before [run()] is called and contains the options
// passed to this command.
print(options['all']);
}
}
Commands can also have subcommands, which are added with addSubcommand. A command with subcommands can't run its own code, so run doesn't need to be implemented. For example:
class StashCommand extends Command {
final String name = "stash";
final String description = "Stash changes in the working directory.";
StashCommand() {
addSubcommand(new StashSaveCommand());
addSubcommand(new StashListCommand());
}
}
CommandRunner automatically adds a help
command that displays usage
information for commands, as well as support for the --help
flag for all
commands. If it encounters an error parsing the arguments or processing a
command, it throws a UsageError; your main()
method should catch these and
print them appropriately. For example:
runner.run(arguments).catchError((error) {
if (error is! UsageError) throw error;
print(error);
exit(64); // Exit code 64 indicates a usage error.
});
Displaying usage #
You can automatically generate nice help text, suitable for use as the output of
--help
. To display good usage information, you should provide some help text
when you create your options.
To define help text for an entire option, use the help:
parameter:
parser.addOption('mode', help: 'The compiler configuration',
allowed: ['debug', 'release']);
parser.addFlag('verbose', help: 'Show additional diagnostic info');
For non-flag options, you can also provide a help string for the parameter:
parser.addOption('out', help: 'The output path', valueHelp: 'path',
allowed: ['debug', 'release']);
For non-flag options, you can also provide detailed help for each expected value
by using the allowedHelp:
parameter:
parser.addOption('arch', help: 'The architecture to compile for',
allowedHelp: {
'ia32': 'Intel x86',
'arm': 'ARM Holding 32-bit chip'
});
To display the help, use the getUsage() method:
print(parser.getUsage());
The resulting string looks something like this:
--mode The compiler configuration
[debug, release]
--out=<path> The output path
--[no-]verbose Show additional diagnostic info
--arch The architecture to compile for
[arm] ARM Holding 32-bit chip
[ia32] Intel x86