OptionParser 0.5.0 → 0.5.1
Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
- data/LICENSE +31 -0
- data/README +36 -43
- data/docs/index.html +521 -362
- data/lib/commandline.rb +14 -0
- metadata +10 -10
- data/test/tc_option.rb +0 -121
- data/test/testall.rb +0 -16
data/LICENSE
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
|
|
1
|
+
OPTIONPARSER LICENSE
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
Copyright (c) 2005, Jim Freeze
|
4
|
+
All rights reserved.
|
5
|
+
|
6
|
+
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
|
7
|
+
a copy of this software and associated documentation files
|
8
|
+
(the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction,
|
9
|
+
including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify,
|
10
|
+
merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the
|
11
|
+
Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished
|
12
|
+
to do so, subject to the following conditions:
|
13
|
+
|
14
|
+
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
|
15
|
+
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
|
16
|
+
|
17
|
+
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
|
18
|
+
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
|
19
|
+
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
|
20
|
+
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
|
21
|
+
OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
|
22
|
+
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
|
23
|
+
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
|
24
|
+
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
|
25
|
+
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
|
26
|
+
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
|
27
|
+
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
|
28
|
+
|
29
|
+
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
|
30
|
+
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php
|
31
|
+
|
data/README
CHANGED
@@ -1,32 +1,22 @@
|
|
1
|
-
LICENSE
|
2
|
-
|
3
|
-
This release is licensed under the RLL - Ruby Lovers License. If you don't
|
4
|
-
love Ruby, then you don't have permission to even think about using/reading/
|
5
|
-
opening any file in this project.
|
6
|
-
|
7
|
-
If you a lover of Ruby, then you may use this freely and pay for your use
|
8
|
-
by giving feedback to the author, Jim Freeze.
|
9
|
-
|
10
|
-
|
11
1
|
CommandLine::OptionParser
|
12
2
|
=========================
|
13
|
-
|
3
|
+
Author: Jim Freeze
|
4
|
+
Copyright 2005 Jim Freeze
|
14
5
|
|
15
6
|
ABOUT
|
16
7
|
=====
|
17
|
-
|
18
8
|
CommandLine::OptionParser is part of the CommandLine suite of
|
19
|
-
tools and is used for command line parsing. The
|
20
|
-
|
21
|
-
CommandLine::Application.
|
9
|
+
tools and is used for command line parsing. The command line
|
10
|
+
parser suite consists of classes CommandLine::Option,
|
11
|
+
CommandLine::OptionData and CommandLine::Application.
|
22
12
|
|
23
13
|
The parser supports POSIX, Gnu and XTools style parsing options.
|
24
|
-
It also
|
14
|
+
It also provides flexibility to support <em>non standard</em>
|
25
15
|
options. For example:
|
26
16
|
|
27
17
|
POSIX
|
28
18
|
=====
|
29
|
-
OptionParser.new Option.new(:names => "-f")
|
19
|
+
OptionParser.new Option.new(:posix, :names => "-f")
|
30
20
|
|
31
21
|
Gnu
|
32
22
|
===
|
@@ -43,50 +33,44 @@ OptionParser.new(Option.new(
|
|
43
33
|
:arg_arity => [1,-1],
|
44
34
|
:arg_description => "file1 [file2, ...]"))
|
45
35
|
|
46
|
-
This
|
36
|
+
This last option prints:
|
47
37
|
|
48
38
|
OPTIONS
|
49
39
|
|
50
40
|
--file,-file,--files,-files,-f file1 [file2, ...]
|
51
41
|
|
52
42
|
|
53
|
-
|
54
|
-
|
55
|
-
|
43
|
+
HISTORY
|
44
|
+
=======
|
56
45
|
After poking around in a few corporations, it was evident that
|
57
|
-
option parsing was not understood.
|
58
|
-
were built that did not conform to any of the POSIX, Gnu or XTools
|
46
|
+
option parsing was not well understood. Therefore, many inhouse
|
47
|
+
tools were built that did not conform to any of the POSIX, Gnu or XTools
|
59
48
|
option styles. CommandLine::OptionParser was developed so that
|
60
|
-
new
|
49
|
+
new applications could be written that conformed to accepted standards,
|
61
50
|
but non-standard option configurations could be handled as well
|
62
51
|
to support legacy interfaces.
|
63
52
|
|
64
|
-
More information on OptionParser can be found
|
65
|
-
http://
|
66
|
-
|
67
|
-
|
68
|
-
Major Features - 06/07/2005
|
69
|
-
=============
|
70
|
-
* First public release 0.5.0
|
71
|
-
|
72
|
-
|
73
|
-
Thanks for all the feedback!
|
74
|
-
|
53
|
+
More information and usage scenarios on OptionParser can be found at:
|
54
|
+
http://rubyforge.org/projects/optionparser/
|
75
55
|
|
76
56
|
Download & Installation
|
77
57
|
=======================
|
78
58
|
|
79
|
-
Homepage: http://
|
80
|
-
Download: http://rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=
|
59
|
+
Homepage: http://rubyforge.org/projects/optionparser/
|
60
|
+
Download: http://rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=632&release_id=2345
|
81
61
|
|
82
62
|
Dependencies:
|
83
63
|
* None
|
84
64
|
|
85
|
-
|
65
|
+
Currently optionparser is only available as a rubygem.
|
86
66
|
|
87
67
|
Via RubyGems
|
88
68
|
$ gem install optionparser
|
89
69
|
|
70
|
+
All feedback is appreciated!
|
71
|
+
|
72
|
+
Installations not available yet
|
73
|
+
===============================
|
90
74
|
# not in RPA yet
|
91
75
|
Via RPA
|
92
76
|
$ rpa install optionparser
|
@@ -102,9 +86,18 @@ The simplified do-it-yourself way
|
|
102
86
|
$ rake install
|
103
87
|
|
104
88
|
|
105
|
-
|
106
|
-
|
89
|
+
RELEASE NOTES
|
90
|
+
=============
|
91
|
+
|
92
|
+
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
93
|
+
0.5.1 06/17/2005
|
94
|
+
* Contains all planned features except CVS like command handling
|
95
|
+
* Fixed loading path using gems. Is now loaded by:
|
96
|
+
require 'rubygems'
|
97
|
+
require 'commandline/optionparser'
|
98
|
+
* Updated documentation
|
99
|
+
|
100
|
+
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
101
|
+
0.5.0 06/07/2005
|
102
|
+
* First public release
|
107
103
|
|
108
|
-
class MyApp << CommandLine::Application
|
109
|
-
|
110
|
-
end
|
data/docs/index.html
CHANGED
@@ -3,9 +3,7 @@
|
|
3
3
|
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
|
4
4
|
<head>
|
5
5
|
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
|
6
|
-
<title>
|
7
|
-
<link rel="alternate" type="text/xml" title="RSS"
|
8
|
-
href="http://localhost:8808/index.cgi/index.rss" />
|
6
|
+
<title>CommandLine::OptionParser</title>
|
9
7
|
|
10
8
|
<style type="text/css">
|
11
9
|
body,td {
|
@@ -26,7 +24,10 @@ h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
|
|
26
24
|
}
|
27
25
|
|
28
26
|
pre {
|
29
|
-
border-left: 7px solid #e8d8d8;
|
27
|
+
#border-left: 7px solid #e8d8d8;
|
28
|
+
background: #ffeeff;
|
29
|
+
border-top: 2px solid #aaaaaa;
|
30
|
+
border-left: 2px solid #aaaaaa;
|
30
31
|
}
|
31
32
|
|
32
33
|
.sidebar {
|
@@ -207,30 +208,522 @@ pre {
|
|
207
208
|
</head>
|
208
209
|
<body>
|
209
210
|
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
|
211
|
+
<tr valign="bottom">
|
212
|
+
<td class="pagetitle">CommandLine::OptionParser</a></td>
|
213
|
+
</tr>
|
214
|
+
</table>
|
215
|
+
<hr />
|
216
|
+
<table>
|
217
|
+
<tr valign="top"><td>
|
218
|
+
|
219
|
+
<table class="entry" border="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
|
210
220
|
<tr class="entrybody"><td colspan="3" class="entrybody">
|
211
|
-
<h1>Welcome to
|
212
|
-
<
|
213
|
-
|
221
|
+
<h1>Welcome to OptionParser</h1>
|
222
|
+
<ul>
|
223
|
+
<li>Copyright © 2005 Jim Freeze
|
224
|
+
|
225
|
+
</li>
|
226
|
+
<li>Author: Jim Freeze
|
227
|
+
|
228
|
+
</li>
|
229
|
+
<li><a href="http://www.freeze.org/ruby/optionparser/license.txt">License</a>
|
230
|
+
</li>
|
231
|
+
<li><a href="http://rubyforge.org/projects/optionparser/">Project Page</a>
|
232
|
+
</li>
|
233
|
+
<li><a href="http://rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=632&release_id=2345">Download</a>
|
234
|
+
</li>
|
235
|
+
</ul>
|
236
|
+
<tt>OptionParser</tt> is
|
214
237
|
designed to be a flexible command line parser with a Ruby look and feel to
|
215
|
-
it. <
|
216
|
-
|
217
|
-
|
218
|
-
<tt>
|
238
|
+
it. <tt>OptionParser</tt> got
|
239
|
+
its birth from the need for a parser that is standards compliant, yet
|
240
|
+
flexible. <tt>OptionParser</tt>
|
241
|
+
supports the standard command line styles of <tt>Unix</tt>, <tt>Gnu</tt>
|
242
|
+
and <tt>X Toolkit</tt>, but also lets you break those rules.
|
243
|
+
|
244
|
+
<p>
|
245
|
+
<tt>OptionParser</tt> is
|
246
|
+
not a port of a traditional command line parser, but it is written to meet
|
247
|
+
the feature requirements of traditional command line parsers. When using it
|
248
|
+
as a library, you should notice that it is expressive, supports
|
249
|
+
Ruby’s blocks and lambda’s, and is sprinkled with a little bit
|
250
|
+
of magic.
|
251
|
+
</p>
|
252
|
+
<p>
|
253
|
+
While the library can be used by itself, it is also designed to work with
|
254
|
+
the <tt>CommandLine::Application</tt> class. These tools work together to
|
255
|
+
facilitate the generation of a sophisticated (batch oriented) application
|
256
|
+
user interface in a matter of minutes.
|
257
|
+
</p>
|
258
|
+
<p>
|
259
|
+
If you need a refresher on the traditional option parsing schemes, see
|
260
|
+
"Traditional Option Parsing Schemes" below.
|
261
|
+
</p>
|
262
|
+
<h1>Jumping Right In</h1>
|
263
|
+
<h1>OptionParser Usage</h1>
|
264
|
+
<p>
|
265
|
+
The OptionParser
|
266
|
+
library consists of three classes, <tt>Option</tt>, <tt>OptionParser</tt> and
|
267
|
+
<tt>OptionData</tt>. For each option an <tt>Option</tt> object is created.
|
268
|
+
When you are ready to prepare for command line parsing, these options are
|
269
|
+
collected into an array and fed to <tt>OptionParser</tt>.
|
270
|
+
This <tt>OptionParser</tt>
|
271
|
+
object controls the type of option scheme that is implemented. When it
|
272
|
+
comes time to parse a command line, call the method <tt>Option#parse</tt>.
|
273
|
+
This will parse any array, but parses ARGV by default. The result is an
|
274
|
+
<tt>OptionData</tt> object. This object can be used from which to extract
|
275
|
+
values or it can be passed to another class as a fully encapsulated data
|
276
|
+
object.
|
277
|
+
</p>
|
278
|
+
<h2>Getting Started</h2>
|
279
|
+
<h3>Installing</h3>
|
280
|
+
<pre>
|
281
|
+
gem install -r OptionParser
|
282
|
+
</pre>
|
283
|
+
<h3>Loading the library</h3>
|
284
|
+
<pre>
|
285
|
+
require 'rubygems'
|
286
|
+
require 'commandline/optionparser'
|
287
|
+
include CommandLine
|
288
|
+
</pre>
|
289
|
+
<h3>Using Option Parser</h3>
|
290
|
+
<p>
|
291
|
+
An option is created with the following syntax:
|
292
|
+
</p>
|
293
|
+
<pre>
|
294
|
+
opt = Option.new([options], <properties>)
|
295
|
+
</pre>
|
296
|
+
<p>
|
297
|
+
The options can be <tt>:flag</tt> or <tt>:posix</tt>. <tt>:flag</tt> means
|
298
|
+
that the option is a mode flag and does not take any arguments.
|
299
|
+
<tt>:posix</tt> means that <tt>Option</tt> will validate the properties to
|
300
|
+
ensure they are posix compliant.
|
301
|
+
</p>
|
302
|
+
<p>
|
303
|
+
An option object has six properties. Four of these properties define
|
304
|
+
attributes of the object. The last two define <em>actions</em> that are
|
305
|
+
taken when a command line is parsed.
|
306
|
+
</p>
|
307
|
+
<ol>
|
308
|
+
<li>:names
|
309
|
+
|
310
|
+
</li>
|
311
|
+
<li>:arg_arity
|
312
|
+
|
313
|
+
</li>
|
314
|
+
<li>:opt_description
|
315
|
+
|
316
|
+
</li>
|
317
|
+
<li>:arg_description
|
318
|
+
|
319
|
+
</li>
|
320
|
+
<li>:opt_found
|
321
|
+
|
322
|
+
</li>
|
323
|
+
<li>:opt_not_found
|
324
|
+
|
325
|
+
</li>
|
326
|
+
</ol>
|
327
|
+
<p>
|
328
|
+
It is not necessary to set values for all of these properties. Some are set
|
329
|
+
automatically, as we’ll see below.
|
330
|
+
</p>
|
331
|
+
<h3>Posix</h3>
|
332
|
+
<p>
|
333
|
+
The default <tt>Option</tt> object is non-posix.
|
334
|
+
</p>
|
335
|
+
<pre>
|
336
|
+
op1 = OptionParser.new(:posix, opts)
|
337
|
+
op2 = OptionParser.new(opts)
|
338
|
+
op1.posix #=> true
|
339
|
+
op2.posix #=> false
|
340
|
+
</pre>
|
341
|
+
<h3>Mode-Flag</h3>
|
342
|
+
<p>
|
343
|
+
To create a mode flag, that is, an option that is either true or false
|
344
|
+
depending if it is seen on the command line or not, we could write:
|
345
|
+
</p>
|
346
|
+
<pre>
|
347
|
+
opt_debug = Option.new(
|
348
|
+
:names => %w(--debug -d), # the flag has two names
|
349
|
+
:arg_arity => [0,0], # this says take no arugments
|
350
|
+
:opt_description => "Sets debug to true",
|
351
|
+
:arg_description => "",
|
352
|
+
:opt_found => true, # true if seen on command line
|
353
|
+
:opt_not_found => false # false if not seen on command line
|
354
|
+
)
|
355
|
+
</pre>
|
356
|
+
<p>
|
357
|
+
Now, this is a lot of work just for a common mode-flag. However, there is a
|
358
|
+
shorter way:
|
359
|
+
</p>
|
360
|
+
<pre>
|
361
|
+
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug -d))
|
362
|
+
</pre>
|
363
|
+
<p>
|
364
|
+
When <tt>Option</tt> sees the :flag option, it makes some assignments
|
365
|
+
behind the scenes and what you are left with is:
|
366
|
+
</p>
|
367
|
+
<pre>
|
368
|
+
:names => ["--debug", "-d"]
|
369
|
+
:arg_arity => [0, 0]
|
370
|
+
:opt_description => "Sets debug to true." # debug is taken from the first name
|
371
|
+
:arg_description => ""
|
372
|
+
:opt_found => true
|
373
|
+
:opt_not_found => false
|
374
|
+
</pre>
|
375
|
+
<p>
|
376
|
+
For a common option like a mode-flag, <tt>Option</tt> will use the first
|
377
|
+
option ‘word’ it finds in the :names list and use that in the
|
378
|
+
automatic option text. Of course, if you don’t want any text, just
|
379
|
+
set the option description to an empty string:
|
380
|
+
</p>
|
381
|
+
<pre>
|
382
|
+
:opt_description => "".
|
383
|
+
</pre>
|
384
|
+
<h3>Option Arguments</h3>
|
385
|
+
<p>
|
386
|
+
If an option is not a mode flag, then it takes arguments. Most option
|
387
|
+
parsers only permit a single argument per option flag. If your application
|
388
|
+
needs multiple arguments, the standard method is just to repeat the option
|
389
|
+
multiple times, once for each required argument. For example, if I need to
|
390
|
+
pass two files to an application I would need something like:
|
391
|
+
</p>
|
392
|
+
<pre>
|
393
|
+
myapp -f file1 -f file2
|
394
|
+
</pre>
|
395
|
+
<p>
|
396
|
+
But, it would be cleaner if the command line could be expressed as:
|
397
|
+
</p>
|
398
|
+
<pre>
|
399
|
+
myapp -f file1 file2
|
400
|
+
</pre>
|
401
|
+
<p>
|
402
|
+
Well, no longer do you have to suffer with thirty-year old option parser
|
403
|
+
technology. <tt>OptionParser</tt>
|
404
|
+
permits multiple arguments per option flag and the number of arguments can
|
405
|
+
be defined to be variable.
|
406
|
+
</p>
|
407
|
+
<p>
|
408
|
+
To define an option that takes 1 or more arguments, the following can be
|
409
|
+
done:
|
410
|
+
</p>
|
411
|
+
<pre>
|
412
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => "--file", :arg_arity => [1,-1])
|
413
|
+
</pre>
|
414
|
+
<p>
|
415
|
+
Let’s say the option required at least two arguments, but not more
|
416
|
+
than five. This is defined with:
|
417
|
+
</p>
|
418
|
+
<pre>
|
419
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => "--file", :arg_arity => [2,5])
|
420
|
+
OptionParser.new(opt).parse
|
421
|
+
|
422
|
+
% myapp --file file1 # exception raised
|
423
|
+
% myapp --file file1 file2 # ok
|
424
|
+
% myapp --file file1 file2 file3 # ok
|
425
|
+
% myapp --file f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 # f6 remains on the command line
|
426
|
+
</pre>
|
427
|
+
<p>
|
428
|
+
This ability is handy on occassions where an option argument is
|
429
|
+
‘optional’.
|
430
|
+
</p>
|
431
|
+
<pre>
|
432
|
+
myapp --custom # no args, uses $HOME/.myapprc
|
433
|
+
myapp --custom my_custom_file # uses my_custom_file
|
434
|
+
</pre>
|
435
|
+
<p>
|
436
|
+
This type of option is defined by:
|
437
|
+
</p>
|
438
|
+
<pre>
|
439
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => "--custom", :arg_arity => [0,1])
|
440
|
+
</pre>
|
441
|
+
<p>
|
442
|
+
If the <tt>:arg_arity</tt> is not satisfied, an exception is raised.
|
443
|
+
</p>
|
444
|
+
<h3>Actions</h3>
|
445
|
+
<p>
|
446
|
+
The option properties <tt>:opt_found</tt> and <tt>:opt_not_found</tt> are
|
447
|
+
the source of the value returned for an option when it is parsed. These
|
448
|
+
properties can be either an object or a proc/lambda. If they are an object,
|
449
|
+
then the stored object is simply returned. If they are lambdas, then the
|
450
|
+
stored value is the return value of the proc/lambda. So, the following will
|
451
|
+
have the same result:
|
452
|
+
</p>
|
453
|
+
<pre>
|
454
|
+
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
455
|
+
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
456
|
+
:opt_found => true,
|
457
|
+
:opt_not_found => false
|
458
|
+
)
|
219
459
|
|
460
|
+
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
461
|
+
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
462
|
+
:opt_found => lambda { true },
|
463
|
+
:opt_not_found => lambda { false }
|
464
|
+
)
|
465
|
+
</pre>
|
466
|
+
<p>
|
467
|
+
Notice that there is no need to set an instance variable to a default
|
468
|
+
value. Normally one does:
|
469
|
+
</p>
|
470
|
+
<pre>
|
471
|
+
@debug = false
|
472
|
+
# option setup
|
473
|
+
... parse the commandline
|
474
|
+
@debug = true if parse_results["--debug"]
|
475
|
+
</pre>
|
476
|
+
<p>
|
477
|
+
But with <tt>OptionParser</tt>, one
|
478
|
+
has the capability of doing the following:
|
479
|
+
</p>
|
480
|
+
<pre>
|
481
|
+
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug -d))
|
482
|
+
... parse the commandline
|
483
|
+
@debug = option_data[:debug] # value is set without need for default
|
484
|
+
|
485
|
+
# or
|
486
|
+
|
487
|
+
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
488
|
+
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
489
|
+
:opt_found => lambda { @debug = true },
|
490
|
+
:opt_not_found => lambda { @debug = false }
|
491
|
+
)
|
492
|
+
# do nothing, variable already set.
|
493
|
+
</pre>
|
494
|
+
<p>
|
495
|
+
I find this much easier to manage than having to worry about setting
|
496
|
+
default behaviour. Now that we know how to create options, let’s move
|
497
|
+
on to the commandline parser.
|
498
|
+
</p>
|
499
|
+
<h2>OptionParser</h2>
|
500
|
+
<p>
|
501
|
+
Once the options are defined, we load them into an <tt>OptionParser</tt> and
|
502
|
+
parse the command line. The syntax for creating an <tt>OptionParser</tt>
|
503
|
+
object is:
|
504
|
+
</p>
|
505
|
+
<pre>
|
506
|
+
OptionParser.new(prop_flags, option)
|
507
|
+
OptionParser.new(prop_flags, [options])
|
508
|
+
OptionParser.new(option)
|
509
|
+
OptionParser.new([options])
|
510
|
+
</pre>
|
511
|
+
<p>
|
512
|
+
where the possible property flags are:
|
513
|
+
</p>
|
514
|
+
<pre>
|
515
|
+
:posix
|
516
|
+
:unknown_options_action => :collect | :ignore | :raise
|
517
|
+
</pre>
|
518
|
+
<p>
|
519
|
+
If you want to parse posix, you must specify so. <tt>OptionParser</tt> will
|
520
|
+
not assume posix mode just because all of the options are posix options.
|
521
|
+
This allows you to use posix only options but not require the strict
|
522
|
+
parsing rules.
|
523
|
+
</p>
|
524
|
+
<p>
|
525
|
+
Below are a few examples of creating an <tt>OptionParser</tt>
|
526
|
+
object:
|
527
|
+
</p>
|
528
|
+
<pre>
|
529
|
+
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(-h))
|
530
|
+
op1 = OptionParser.new(:posix, opt)
|
531
|
+
op2 = OptionParser.new(opt)
|
532
|
+
</pre>
|
533
|
+
<p>
|
534
|
+
or
|
535
|
+
</p>
|
536
|
+
<pre>
|
537
|
+
opts = []
|
538
|
+
opts << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--help h))
|
539
|
+
opts << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug d))
|
540
|
+
</pre>
|
541
|
+
<p>
|
542
|
+
Options may be added to an <tt>OptionParser</tt> by
|
543
|
+
three different methods:
|
544
|
+
</p>
|
545
|
+
<pre>
|
546
|
+
# Options added as arguments during OptionParser construction
|
547
|
+
op = OptionParser.new(opt1, opt2)
|
548
|
+
op = OptionParser.new([opt1, opt2])
|
549
|
+
</pre>
|
550
|
+
<p>
|
551
|
+
or
|
552
|
+
</p>
|
553
|
+
<pre>
|
554
|
+
# Options added in a block constructor
|
555
|
+
op = OptionParser.new { |o| o << opts }
|
556
|
+
</pre>
|
557
|
+
<p>
|
558
|
+
or
|
559
|
+
</p>
|
560
|
+
<pre>
|
561
|
+
# Options added to an existing OptionParser object
|
562
|
+
op = OptionParser.new
|
563
|
+
op << opts
|
564
|
+
</pre>
|
565
|
+
<h3>Parsing the Command Line</h3>
|
566
|
+
<p>
|
567
|
+
Parsing the command line is as simple as calling <tt>#parse</tt>:
|
568
|
+
</p>
|
569
|
+
<pre>
|
570
|
+
option_data = op.parse
|
571
|
+
</pre>
|
572
|
+
<h3>Printing an Option Summary</h3>
|
573
|
+
<p>
|
574
|
+
A <tt>OptionParser</tt> with
|
575
|
+
a complete set of options added to it defines the human interface that your
|
576
|
+
application presents to a user. Therefore, the parser should be able to
|
577
|
+
provide a nicely formatted summary for the user.
|
578
|
+
</p>
|
579
|
+
<p>
|
580
|
+
An example is shown below with its corresponding output:
|
581
|
+
</p>
|
582
|
+
<pre>
|
583
|
+
require 'rubygems'
|
584
|
+
require 'commandline/optionparser'
|
585
|
+
include CommandLine
|
586
|
+
puts OptionParser.new { |o|
|
587
|
+
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w[--debug -d])
|
588
|
+
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w[--help -h],
|
589
|
+
:opt_description => "Prints this page.")
|
590
|
+
o << Option.new(:names => %w[--ouput -o],
|
591
|
+
:opt_description => "Defines the output file.",
|
592
|
+
:arg_description => "output_file")
|
593
|
+
o << Option.new(:names => %w[--a-long-opt --with-many-names -a -A],
|
594
|
+
:arg_arity => [2,-1],
|
595
|
+
:opt_description => "Your really long description here.",
|
596
|
+
:arg_description => "file1 file2 [file3 ...]")
|
597
|
+
}.to_s
|
598
|
+
</pre>
|
599
|
+
<p>
|
600
|
+
Generates the output:
|
601
|
+
</p>
|
602
|
+
<pre>
|
603
|
+
OPTIONS
|
604
|
+
|
605
|
+
--debug,-d
|
606
|
+
Sets debug to true.
|
607
|
+
|
608
|
+
--help,-h
|
609
|
+
Prints this page.
|
610
|
+
|
611
|
+
--ouput,-o output_file
|
612
|
+
Defines the output file.
|
613
|
+
|
614
|
+
--a-long-opt,--with-many-names,-a,-A file1 file2 [file3 ...]
|
615
|
+
Your really long description here.
|
616
|
+
</pre>
|
617
|
+
<h2>Option Data</h2>
|
618
|
+
<p>
|
619
|
+
The <tt>OptionData</tt> is the return value of <tt>OptionParser#parse</tt>.
|
620
|
+
The parsing results for each option are accessed with the bracket notation
|
621
|
+
#[].
|
622
|
+
</p>
|
623
|
+
<pre>
|
624
|
+
opt = Option.new(:posix,
|
625
|
+
:names => %w(-r),
|
626
|
+
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARGS)
|
627
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(:posix, opt).parse(["-rubygems"])
|
628
|
+
od["-r"] #=> "ubygems"
|
629
|
+
|
630
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(:posix, opt).parse(["-r", "ubygems"])
|
631
|
+
od["-r"] #=> "ubygems"
|
632
|
+
</pre>
|
633
|
+
<p>
|
634
|
+
<tt>OptionData</tt> behaves similar to a hash object in that the parsed
|
635
|
+
option data is accessed with #[] where the key is the first item in the
|
636
|
+
:names array of each option. An option cannot access its parsed values
|
637
|
+
using just any of its names.
|
638
|
+
</p>
|
639
|
+
<pre>
|
640
|
+
od = OptionParser.new { |o|
|
641
|
+
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--valid --notvalid))
|
642
|
+
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--first --second))
|
643
|
+
}.parse(%w(--notvalid --second))
|
644
|
+
od["--valid"] #=> true
|
645
|
+
od["--first"] #=> true
|
646
|
+
od["--notvalid"] #=> CommandLine::OptionData::UnknownOptionError
|
647
|
+
od["--second"] #=> CommandLine::OptionData::UnknownOptionError
|
648
|
+
</pre>
|
649
|
+
<h3>Built-in Data Handlers</h3>
|
650
|
+
<p>
|
651
|
+
OptionParser has
|
652
|
+
built-in data handlers for handling common scenarios. These lambdas can
|
653
|
+
save a lot of typing.
|
654
|
+
</p>
|
655
|
+
<h3>GET_ARG_ARRAY</h3>
|
656
|
+
<p>
|
657
|
+
This is useful for options that take a variable number of arguments. It
|
658
|
+
returns all the arguments in an array.
|
659
|
+
</p>
|
660
|
+
<pre>
|
661
|
+
# GET_ARG_ARRAY returns all arguments in an array, even if no
|
662
|
+
# arguments are present. This is not to be confused with the option
|
663
|
+
# occuring multiple times on the command line.
|
664
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--file),
|
665
|
+
:argument_arity => [0,-1],
|
666
|
+
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARG_ARRAY)
|
667
|
+
#:opt_found => :collect) # would this be better?
|
668
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file))
|
669
|
+
od["--file"] #=> []
|
670
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file))
|
671
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file"]
|
672
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 --file file2))
|
673
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file2"]
|
674
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 file2))
|
675
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
676
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file file1 file2))
|
677
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
678
|
+
</pre>
|
679
|
+
<h3>GET_ARGS</h3>
|
680
|
+
<p>
|
681
|
+
This is a ‘smart’ option getter. If no arguments are found, it
|
682
|
+
returns true. If a single argument is found, it returns that argument. If
|
683
|
+
more than one argument is found, it returns an array of those arguments.
|
684
|
+
</p>
|
685
|
+
<pre>
|
686
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--file),
|
687
|
+
:argument_arity => [0,-1],
|
688
|
+
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARGS)
|
689
|
+
#:opt_found => :smart_collect) # would this be better?
|
690
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file))
|
691
|
+
od["--file"] #=> true
|
692
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file))
|
693
|
+
od["--file"] #=> "file"
|
694
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 --file file2))
|
695
|
+
od["--file"] #=> "file2"
|
696
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 file2))
|
697
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
698
|
+
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file file1 file2))
|
699
|
+
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
700
|
+
</pre>
|
220
701
|
<p>
|
221
|
-
|
222
|
-
a port of a traditional command line parser, but it is written to meet the
|
223
|
-
feature requirements of traditional command line parsers. When using it as
|
224
|
-
a library, you should notice that it is expressive, supports Ruby’s
|
225
|
-
blocks and lambda’s, and is sprinkled with a little bit of magic.
|
702
|
+
And, for those oxymoronic non-optional options:
|
226
703
|
</p>
|
704
|
+
<pre>
|
705
|
+
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--not-really-an-option),
|
706
|
+
:opt_not_found => OptionParser::OPT_NOT_FOUND_BUT_REQUIRED
|
707
|
+
)
|
708
|
+
OptionParser.new(opt).parse([]) #=> OptionParser::MissingRequiredOptionError
|
709
|
+
</pre>
|
710
|
+
<h3><tt>OptionData</tt></h3>
|
227
711
|
<p>
|
228
|
-
|
229
|
-
|
230
|
-
|
231
|
-
|
712
|
+
We have just shown that after parsing a command line, the result of each
|
713
|
+
option is found from OptionData. The values that remain on the command line
|
714
|
+
are assigned to <tt>args</tt>. Other attributes of <tt>OptionData</tt> are:
|
715
|
+
</p>
|
716
|
+
<pre>
|
717
|
+
od.argv # the original command line
|
718
|
+
od.unknown_options # If OptionParser was told to :collect unknown options
|
719
|
+
od.args # arguments not claimed by any option
|
720
|
+
od.not_parsed # arguments following a '--' on the command line
|
721
|
+
od.cmd # not yet implemented - but a cvs like command
|
722
|
+
</pre>
|
723
|
+
<hr size="2"></hr><h1>Traditional Option Parsing Schemes</h1>
|
724
|
+
<p>
|
725
|
+
This section is a brief overview of traditional command line parsing.
|
232
726
|
</p>
|
233
|
-
<h1>Traditional Option Parsing Schemes</h1>
|
234
727
|
<p>
|
235
728
|
Command line options traditionally occur in three flavors:
|
236
729
|
</p>
|
@@ -371,11 +864,6 @@ The options in this style are sometimes referred to as
|
|
371
864
|
The compatibility is maintained by preceding the <em>long_options</em> with
|
372
865
|
two dashes. The option word must be two or more characters.
|
373
866
|
</p>
|
374
|
-
<pre>
|
375
|
-
:test
|
376
|
-
if gnu_style is slected, ensure only two options and that one
|
377
|
-
is Unix and one is Gnu style.
|
378
|
-
</pre>
|
379
867
|
<h3>Separation Between the Option Flag and Its Argument</h3>
|
380
868
|
<p>
|
381
869
|
Gnu style options cannot be grouped. For options that have an argument, the
|
@@ -419,18 +907,16 @@ filtered from the command line before passing them to an application.
|
|
419
907
|
<p>
|
420
908
|
It is convention that a bare hypen indicates to read from stdin.
|
421
909
|
</p>
|
422
|
-
<h2>The
|
910
|
+
<h2>The OptionParser Style</h2>
|
423
911
|
<p>
|
424
|
-
The CommandLine
|
425
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> does not
|
912
|
+
The CommandLine::OptionParser does not
|
426
913
|
care what style you use. It is designed for maximum flexiblity so it may be
|
427
914
|
used within any organiziation to meet their standards.
|
428
915
|
</p>
|
429
916
|
<h3>Multiple Option Names</h3>
|
430
|
-
<p>
|
431
|
-
<a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> does
|
917
|
+
<p> OptionParser does
|
432
918
|
not place restrictions on the number of options. The only restriction is
|
433
|
-
that an option name begin with a hyphen ’-’.
|
919
|
+
that an option name begin with a hyphen ’-’. A definitely
|
434
920
|
conjured example of this freedom is:
|
435
921
|
</p>
|
436
922
|
<pre>
|
@@ -438,7 +924,6 @@ conjured example of this freedom is:
|
|
438
924
|
--file --File --f --F -file -File -f -F
|
439
925
|
)
|
440
926
|
</pre>
|
441
|
-
<h2>Miscellaneous Option Styles</h2>
|
442
927
|
<h3>Prefix Matching</h3>
|
443
928
|
<p>
|
444
929
|
Although not encouraged, some prefer the ability to truncate option words
|
@@ -474,8 +959,7 @@ should happen when the following is given:
|
|
474
959
|
<p>
|
475
960
|
Should the parser flag this as an error or should it accept both arguments.
|
476
961
|
</p>
|
477
|
-
<p>
|
478
|
-
<a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> gives
|
962
|
+
<p> OptionParser gives
|
479
963
|
you the choice of whether it raises an exception when an option is seen
|
480
964
|
more than once, or it just passes the data onto the user.
|
481
965
|
</p>
|
@@ -510,337 +994,12 @@ on how this is handled in the usage section.
|
|
510
994
|
A conflict can occur where a grouping of single letter Unix options has the
|
511
995
|
value as a word option preceded by a single dash. For this reason, it is
|
512
996
|
customary to use the double-dash notation for word options. Unless
|
513
|
-
double-dashes are enforced for word options,
|
514
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> will
|
997
|
+
double-dashes are enforced for word options, OptionParser will
|
515
998
|
check for possible name conflicts and raise an exception if it finds one.
|
516
999
|
</p>
|
517
|
-
<p>
|
518
|
-
An individual Option. Why isnt’ a hash good enough? I think it is. An
|
519
|
-
option, is a hash. But, it can’t validate itself. <a
|
520
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> should
|
521
|
-
worry about parsing using a collection of options
|
522
|
-
</p>
|
523
|
-
<h1><a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> Usage</h1>
|
524
|
-
<p>
|
525
|
-
The <a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a>
|
526
|
-
library consists of three classes, <tt>Option</tt>, <tt><a
|
527
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a></tt> and
|
528
|
-
<tt>OptionData</tt>. For each option an <tt>Option</tt> object is created.
|
529
|
-
When you are ready to prepare for command line parsing, these options are
|
530
|
-
collected into an <tt><a
|
531
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a></tt>
|
532
|
-
object. This object controls the type of option scheme that is to be
|
533
|
-
implemented. When it comes time to parse a command line, call the method
|
534
|
-
+Option#parse+. This will parse any array, but parses ARGV by default. The
|
535
|
-
result is an <tt>OptionData</tt> object. This object can be used from which
|
536
|
-
to extract values or it can be passed to another class as a fully
|
537
|
-
encapsulated data object.
|
538
|
-
</p>
|
539
|
-
<h2>Getting Started</h2>
|
540
|
-
<p>
|
541
|
-
An option is created with the following syntax:
|
542
|
-
</p>
|
543
|
-
<pre>
|
544
|
-
opt = Option.new([type], [options], <properties>)
|
545
|
-
</pre>
|
546
|
-
<p>
|
547
|
-
The optional type can be <tt>:flag</tt> or <tt>:default</tt>, with
|
548
|
-
<tt>:default</tt> naturally being the default.
|
549
|
-
</p>
|
550
|
-
<p>
|
551
|
-
The options supported are
|
552
|
-
</p>
|
553
|
-
<pre>
|
554
|
-
:posix => true | false
|
555
|
-
</pre>
|
556
|
-
<p>
|
557
|
-
with <tt>:posix => false</tt> being the default.
|
558
|
-
</p>
|
559
|
-
<p>
|
560
|
-
An option object has six properties. Four of these properties define
|
561
|
-
attributes of the object. The last two define <em>actions</em> that are
|
562
|
-
taken when a command line is parsed.
|
563
|
-
</p>
|
564
|
-
<ol>
|
565
|
-
<li>:names
|
566
|
-
|
567
|
-
</li>
|
568
|
-
<li>:arg_arity
|
569
|
-
|
570
|
-
</li>
|
571
|
-
<li>:opt_description
|
572
|
-
|
573
|
-
</li>
|
574
|
-
<li>:arg_description
|
575
|
-
|
576
|
-
</li>
|
577
|
-
<li>:opt_found
|
578
|
-
|
579
|
-
</li>
|
580
|
-
<li>:opt_not_found
|
581
|
-
|
582
|
-
</li>
|
583
|
-
</ol>
|
584
|
-
<h3>Mode-Flag</h3>
|
585
|
-
<p>
|
586
|
-
To create a mode flag, that is an option that is either true or false
|
587
|
-
depending if it is seen on the command line, we write:
|
588
|
-
</p>
|
589
|
-
<pre>
|
590
|
-
opt_debug = Option.new(
|
591
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
592
|
-
:arg_arity => [0,0],
|
593
|
-
:opt_description => "Sets debug to true",
|
594
|
-
:arg_description => "",
|
595
|
-
:opt_found => true,
|
596
|
-
:opt_not_found => false
|
597
|
-
)
|
598
|
-
</pre>
|
599
|
-
<p>
|
600
|
-
Now, this is a lot of work just for a common mode-flag. However, there is a
|
601
|
-
shorter way:
|
602
|
-
</p>
|
603
|
-
<pre>
|
604
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag,
|
605
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
606
|
-
:opt_description => "Sets debug to true.")
|
607
|
-
</pre>
|
608
|
-
<p>
|
609
|
-
Or, even simpler yet,
|
610
|
-
</p>
|
611
|
-
<pre>
|
612
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug -d))
|
613
|
-
</pre>
|
614
|
-
<p>
|
615
|
-
For a common option like a mode-flag, <tt>Option</tt> will use the first
|
616
|
-
option ‘word’ it finds in the :names list and use that in the
|
617
|
-
automatic option text. Of course, if you don’t want any text, just
|
618
|
-
set the option description to an empty string:
|
619
|
-
</p>
|
620
|
-
<pre>
|
621
|
-
:opt_description => "".
|
622
|
-
</pre>
|
623
|
-
<h3>POSIX</h3>
|
624
|
-
<p>
|
625
|
-
The default for is false, so the following are equivalent:
|
626
|
-
</p>
|
627
|
-
<pre>
|
628
|
-
op1 = OptionParser.new(opts, :posix => false)
|
629
|
-
op2 = OptionParser.new(opts)
|
630
|
-
op1.posix) #=> false
|
631
|
-
op2.posix) #=> false
|
632
|
-
</pre>
|
633
|
-
<h3>Actions</h3>
|
634
|
-
<p>
|
635
|
-
The option properties <tt>:opt_found</tt> and <tt>:opt_not_found</tt> are
|
636
|
-
the source of the value returned for an option when it is parsed. These
|
637
|
-
properties can be either an object or a proc/lambda. If they are an object,
|
638
|
-
then the stored object is simply returned. If they are lambdas, then the
|
639
|
-
stored value is the result of executing the lambda. So, the following will
|
640
|
-
have the same result:
|
641
|
-
</p>
|
642
|
-
<p>
|
643
|
-
object is the Options can perform actions
|
644
|
-
</p>
|
645
|
-
<pre>
|
646
|
-
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
647
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
648
|
-
:opt_found => true,
|
649
|
-
:opt_not_found => false
|
650
|
-
)
|
651
|
-
|
652
|
-
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
653
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
654
|
-
:opt_found => lambda { true },
|
655
|
-
:opt_not_found => lambda { false }
|
656
|
-
)
|
657
|
-
</pre>
|
658
|
-
<p>
|
659
|
-
The key to notice here is that there is never a need to set an instance
|
660
|
-
variable to a default value. Normally one does:
|
661
|
-
</p>
|
662
|
-
<pre>
|
663
|
-
@debug = false
|
664
|
-
# option setup
|
665
|
-
... parse the commandline
|
666
|
-
@debug = true if parse_results[:debug]
|
667
|
-
</pre>
|
668
|
-
<p>
|
669
|
-
Here, one has the option of doing the following:
|
670
|
-
</p>
|
671
|
-
<pre>
|
672
|
-
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag :names => %w(--debug -d),)
|
673
|
-
... parse the commandline
|
674
|
-
@debug = option_data[:debug]
|
675
|
-
|
676
|
-
# or
|
677
|
-
|
678
|
-
opt_debug = Option.new(:flag
|
679
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
680
|
-
:opt_found => lambda { @debug = true },
|
681
|
-
:opt_not_found => lambda { @debug = false }
|
682
|
-
)
|
683
|
-
# do nothing, variable already set.
|
684
|
-
</pre>
|
685
|
-
<p>
|
686
|
-
I find this much easier to manage that having to worry about setting
|
687
|
-
default behaviour.
|
688
|
-
</p>
|
689
|
-
<h2><a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a></h2>
|
690
|
-
<p>
|
691
|
-
Once the options are defined, we load them into and <a
|
692
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> and parse
|
693
|
-
the command line. The syntax for creating an <a
|
694
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> object
|
695
|
-
is:
|
696
|
-
</p>
|
697
|
-
<pre>
|
698
|
-
OptionParser.new(opt_or_array_of_opts[, options])
|
699
|
-
</pre>
|
700
|
-
<p>
|
701
|
-
where the only option is for parsing posix:
|
702
|
-
</p>
|
703
|
-
<pre>
|
704
|
-
:posix => true | false (default is false)
|
705
|
-
</pre>
|
706
|
-
<p>
|
707
|
-
If you want to parse posix, you must specify so. <a
|
708
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> will not
|
709
|
-
assume posix mode just because all of the options are posix options. This
|
710
|
-
allows you to use posix only options but not require the strict parsing
|
711
|
-
rules.
|
712
|
-
</p>
|
713
|
-
<p>
|
714
|
-
Some examples of creating an <a
|
715
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> object:
|
716
|
-
</p>
|
717
|
-
<pre>
|
718
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(-h))
|
719
|
-
|
720
|
-
op = OptionParser.new(opt, :posix => false)
|
721
|
-
op = OptionParser.new(opt)
|
722
|
-
|
723
|
-
opts = []
|
724
|
-
opts << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--help h))
|
725
|
-
opts << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug d))
|
726
|
-
op = OptionParser.new(opts)
|
727
|
-
|
728
|
-
op = OptionParser.new
|
729
|
-
op << opt
|
730
|
-
op << opts
|
731
|
-
|
732
|
-
# block constructor
|
733
|
-
op = OptionParser.new { |o|
|
734
|
-
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug d))
|
735
|
-
}
|
736
|
-
</pre>
|
737
|
-
<h2>Parsing the Command Line</h2>
|
738
|
-
<p>
|
739
|
-
Parsing the command line is as simple as calling #parse:
|
740
|
-
</p>
|
741
|
-
<pre>
|
742
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(-h))
|
743
|
-
op = OptionParser.new(opt)
|
744
|
-
option_data = op.parse
|
745
|
-
</pre>
|
746
|
-
<h2>Option Data</h2>
|
747
|
-
<p>
|
748
|
-
The OptionData is the return value of <a
|
749
|
-
href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a>#parse.
|
750
|
-
The parsing results for each option are accessed with the bracket notation
|
751
|
-
#[].
|
752
|
-
</p>
|
753
|
-
<pre>
|
754
|
-
opt = Option.new(:posix => true,
|
755
|
-
:names => %w(-r),
|
756
|
-
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARGS)
|
757
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt, :posix => true).parse(["-rubygems"])
|
758
|
-
od["-r"] #=> "ubygems"
|
759
|
-
|
760
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt, :posix => true).parse(["-r", "ubygems"])
|
761
|
-
od["-r"] #=> "ubygems"
|
762
|
-
</pre>
|
763
|
-
<p>
|
764
|
-
But, OptionData is not liberal in that it only stores a reference to an
|
765
|
-
options first name. An option cannot access its parsed values using just
|
766
|
-
any of its names.
|
767
|
-
</p>
|
768
|
-
<pre>
|
769
|
-
od = OptionParser.new { |o|
|
770
|
-
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--valid --notvalid))
|
771
|
-
o << Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--first --second))
|
772
|
-
}.parse(%w(--notvalid --second))
|
773
|
-
od["--valid"] #=> true
|
774
|
-
od["--first"] #=> true
|
775
|
-
od["--notvalid"] #=> CommandLine::OptionData::UnknownOptionError
|
776
|
-
od["--second"] #=> CommandLine::OptionData::UnknownOptionError
|
777
|
-
</pre>
|
778
|
-
<h3>Built-in Data Handlers</h3>
|
779
|
-
<p>
|
780
|
-
<a href="/index.cgi/OptionParser/OptionParser.rdoc">OptionParser</a> has
|
781
|
-
built-in data handlers for handling common scenarios. These lambas can save
|
782
|
-
a lot of typing.
|
783
|
-
</p>
|
784
|
-
<p>
|
785
|
-
The first is GET_ARG_ARRAY. This is useful for options that take a variable
|
786
|
-
number of arguments. It returns all the arguments in an array.
|
787
|
-
</p>
|
788
|
-
<pre>
|
789
|
-
# GET_ARG_ARRAY returns all arguments in an array, even if no
|
790
|
-
# arguments are present. This is not to be confused with the option
|
791
|
-
# occuring multiple times on the command line.
|
792
|
-
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--file),
|
793
|
-
:argument_arity => [0-1],
|
794
|
-
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARG_ARRAY)
|
795
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file))
|
796
|
-
od["--file"] #=> []
|
797
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file))
|
798
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file"]
|
799
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 --file file2))
|
800
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file2"]
|
801
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 file2))
|
802
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
803
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file file1 file2))
|
804
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
805
|
-
</pre>
|
806
|
-
<p>
|
807
|
-
The next is GET_ARGS. This is a ‘smart’ option getter. If no
|
808
|
-
arguments are found, it returns true. If a single argument is found, it
|
809
|
-
returns that argument. If more than one argument is found, it returns an
|
810
|
-
array of those arguments.
|
811
|
-
</p>
|
812
|
-
<pre>
|
813
|
-
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--file),
|
814
|
-
:argument_arity => [0-1],
|
815
|
-
:opt_found => OptionParser::GET_ARGS)
|
816
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file))
|
817
|
-
od["--file"] #=> true
|
818
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file))
|
819
|
-
od["--file"] #=> "file"
|
820
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 --file file2))
|
821
|
-
od["--file"] #=> "file2"
|
822
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file=file1 file2))
|
823
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
824
|
-
od = OptionParser.new(opt).parse(%w(--file file1 file2))
|
825
|
-
od["--file"] #=> ["file1", "file2"]
|
826
|
-
</pre>
|
827
|
-
<p>
|
828
|
-
And, for those oxymoronic non-optional options:
|
829
|
-
</p>
|
830
|
-
<pre>
|
831
|
-
opt = Option.new(:names => %w(--not-really-an-option),
|
832
|
-
:opt_not_found => OptionParser::OPT_NOT_FOUND_BUT_REQUIRED
|
833
|
-
)
|
834
|
-
OptionParser.new(opt).parse([]) #=> OptionParser::MissingRequiredOptionError
|
835
|
-
</pre>
|
836
|
-
<h3>OptionData</h3>
|
837
|
-
<p>
|
838
|
-
We have just shown that after parsing a command line, the result of each
|
839
|
-
option is found from OptionData. The vaues that are left are assigned to
|
840
|
-
<tt>args</tt>. And, the first argument can be a command if so desired.
|
841
|
-
</p>
|
842
1000
|
|
843
1001
|
</td></tr>
|
844
1002
|
</table>
|
1003
|
+
</table>
|
845
1004
|
</body>
|
846
1005
|
</html>
|
data/lib/commandline.rb
ADDED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -3,16 +3,16 @@ rubygems_version: 0.8.10
|
|
3
3
|
specification_version: 1
|
4
4
|
name: OptionParser
|
5
5
|
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
6
|
-
version: 0.5.
|
7
|
-
date: 2005-06-
|
6
|
+
version: 0.5.1
|
7
|
+
date: 2005-06-17
|
8
8
|
summary: A flexible command line option parser.
|
9
9
|
require_paths:
|
10
|
-
- lib
|
11
|
-
email:
|
12
|
-
homepage: http://
|
10
|
+
- lib
|
11
|
+
email: optionparser@freeze.org
|
12
|
+
homepage: http://rubyforge.org/projects/optionparser/
|
13
13
|
rubyforge_project:
|
14
14
|
description:
|
15
|
-
autorequire: optionparser
|
15
|
+
autorequire: commandline/optionparser
|
16
16
|
default_executable:
|
17
17
|
bindir: bin
|
18
18
|
has_rdoc: true
|
@@ -27,9 +27,9 @@ platform: ruby
|
|
27
27
|
authors:
|
28
28
|
- Jim Freeze
|
29
29
|
files:
|
30
|
-
- docs/api
|
31
30
|
- docs/index.html
|
32
31
|
- lib/commandline
|
32
|
+
- lib/commandline.rb
|
33
33
|
- lib/commandline/optionparser
|
34
34
|
- lib/commandline/optionparser.rb
|
35
35
|
- lib/commandline/text
|
@@ -38,12 +38,12 @@ files:
|
|
38
38
|
- lib/commandline/optionparser/optionparser.rb
|
39
39
|
- lib/commandline/text/format.rb
|
40
40
|
- README
|
41
|
-
|
42
|
-
|
43
|
-
- test/tc_option.rb
|
41
|
+
- LICENSE
|
42
|
+
test_files: []
|
44
43
|
rdoc_options: []
|
45
44
|
extra_rdoc_files:
|
46
45
|
- README
|
46
|
+
- LICENSE
|
47
47
|
executables: []
|
48
48
|
extensions: []
|
49
49
|
requirements: []
|
data/test/tc_option.rb
DELETED
@@ -1,121 +0,0 @@
|
|
1
|
-
# $Id$
|
2
|
-
# $Source$
|
3
|
-
#
|
4
|
-
# Author: Jim Freeze
|
5
|
-
# Copyright (c) 2005
|
6
|
-
#
|
7
|
-
# =DESCRIPTION
|
8
|
-
# Test cases for Option Class
|
9
|
-
#
|
10
|
-
# =Revision History
|
11
|
-
# Jim.Freeze 2005/04/02 Birthday
|
12
|
-
#
|
13
|
-
|
14
|
-
require 'test/unit'
|
15
|
-
require 'commandline/optionparser'
|
16
|
-
|
17
|
-
class TC_Option < Test::Unit::TestCase
|
18
|
-
include CommandLine
|
19
|
-
|
20
|
-
def test_flag_parameters
|
21
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => "-h")
|
22
|
-
assert_equal(%w(-h), opt.names)
|
23
|
-
assert_equal([0,0], opt.arg_arity)
|
24
|
-
assert_equal("", opt.opt_description)
|
25
|
-
assert_equal("", opt.arg_description)
|
26
|
-
assert_equal(true, opt.opt_found)
|
27
|
-
assert_equal(false, opt.opt_not_found)
|
28
|
-
assert_equal(false, opt.posix)
|
29
|
-
end
|
30
|
-
|
31
|
-
def test_posix
|
32
|
-
op = Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(-))
|
33
|
-
assert_equal(true, op.posix)
|
34
|
-
op = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(-))
|
35
|
-
assert_equal(false, op.posix)
|
36
|
-
|
37
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidOptionNameError) {
|
38
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(--help))
|
39
|
-
}
|
40
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidOptionNameError) {
|
41
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(-help))
|
42
|
-
}
|
43
|
-
assert_nothing_raised {
|
44
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(-h))
|
45
|
-
}
|
46
|
-
assert_nothing_raised {
|
47
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(-H))
|
48
|
-
}
|
49
|
-
assert_nothing_raised {
|
50
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :posix, :names => %w(-))
|
51
|
-
}
|
52
|
-
end
|
53
|
-
|
54
|
-
def test_no_dash_name
|
55
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidOptionNameError) {
|
56
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :names => ["fred"])
|
57
|
-
}
|
58
|
-
end
|
59
|
-
|
60
|
-
def test_flag_constructor
|
61
|
-
opt = nil
|
62
|
-
assert_nothing_raised { opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug -d) ) }
|
63
|
-
assert_equal("Sets debug to true.", opt.opt_description)
|
64
|
-
|
65
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag,
|
66
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
67
|
-
:opt_description => ""
|
68
|
-
)
|
69
|
-
assert_equal("", opt.opt_description)
|
70
|
-
|
71
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag,
|
72
|
-
:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
73
|
-
:opt_description => "Custom description"
|
74
|
-
)
|
75
|
-
assert_equal("Custom description", opt.opt_description)
|
76
|
-
end
|
77
|
-
|
78
|
-
def test_block_constructor
|
79
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::MissingPropertyError) {
|
80
|
-
opt = Option.new { |opp| opp.names = %w(--fred -f) }
|
81
|
-
}
|
82
|
-
end
|
83
|
-
|
84
|
-
def test_no_arity
|
85
|
-
opt = nil
|
86
|
-
assert_nothing_raised { opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => %w(--debug -d) ) }
|
87
|
-
assert_equal([0,0], opt.arg_arity)
|
88
|
-
end
|
89
|
-
|
90
|
-
def test_arity_is_number
|
91
|
-
opt = nil
|
92
|
-
assert_nothing_raised { opt =
|
93
|
-
Option.new(:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
94
|
-
:arg_arity => 1) }
|
95
|
-
assert_equal([1,1], opt.arg_arity)
|
96
|
-
|
97
|
-
opt = nil
|
98
|
-
assert_nothing_raised { opt =
|
99
|
-
Option.new(:names => %w(--debug -d),
|
100
|
-
:arg_arity => 2) }
|
101
|
-
assert_equal([2,2], opt.arg_arity)
|
102
|
-
end
|
103
|
-
|
104
|
-
def test_names_not_array
|
105
|
-
op = nil
|
106
|
-
assert_nothing_raised { op = Option.new(:flag, :names => "-fred") }
|
107
|
-
assert_equal(["-fred"], op.names)
|
108
|
-
end
|
109
|
-
|
110
|
-
def test_incompatible_properties
|
111
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidArgumentArityError) {
|
112
|
-
opt = Option.new(:flag, :names => "-a", :arg_arity => 1) }
|
113
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidArgumentArityError) {
|
114
|
-
Option.new(:flag, :names => "-b", :arg_arity => 1) }
|
115
|
-
|
116
|
-
assert_raises(CommandLine::Option::InvalidOptionNameError) {
|
117
|
-
Option.new(:posix, :names => "--fred") }
|
118
|
-
end
|
119
|
-
|
120
|
-
|
121
|
-
end#class TC_Option
|
data/test/testall.rb
DELETED
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
|
|
1
|
-
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
|
2
|
-
|
3
|
-
$LOAD_PATH.unshift("#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/../lib")
|
4
|
-
|
5
|
-
require 'commandline/optionparser'
|
6
|
-
|
7
|
-
#tc = %w( tc_option.rb tc_optionparser.rb tc_optiondata.rb )
|
8
|
-
tc = Dir["tc_*rb"]
|
9
|
-
|
10
|
-
tc.each { |lib|
|
11
|
-
fork {
|
12
|
-
require lib
|
13
|
-
#puts "===> Testing #{lib}"
|
14
|
-
}
|
15
|
-
}
|
16
|
-
|