Mature command line arguments processor for Go.
Inspired by Ruby's (OptionParser) command line arguments processor.
go get github.com/speedata/optionparser
op := optionparser.NewOptionParser()
op.On(arguments ...interface{})
...
err := op.Parse()
where arguments
is one of:
"-a"
: a short argument"--argument"
: a long argument"--argument [FOO]"
a long argument with an optional parameter"--argument FOO"
a long argument with a mandatory parameter"Some text"
: The description text for the command line parameter&aboolean
: Set the given boolean totrue
if the argument is given, set tofalse
if parameter is prefixed withno-
, such as--no-foo
.&astring
: Set the string to the value of the given parameterfunction
: Call the function. The function must have the signaturefunc()
.map[string]string
: Set an entry of the map to the value of the given parameter and the key of the argument.[]string
Set the slice values to a comma separated list.
The options -h
and --help
are included by default. The example below output this on cmd -h
:
Usage: [parameter] command
-h, --help Show this help
-a, --func call myfunc
--bstring=FOO set string to FOO
-c set boolean option (try -no-c)
-d, --dlong=VAL set option
-e, --elong[=VAL] set option with optional parameter
-f boolean option
Commands
y Run command y
z Run command z
After calling op := optionparser.NewOptionParser()
you can set op.Banner
to set the first line of the help output. The default value is Usage: [parameter] command
.
To control the first and last column of the help output, set op.Start
and op.Stop
. The default values are the integer values of 30 and 79.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"github.com/speedata/optionparser"
)
func myfunc() {
fmt.Println("myfunc called")
}
func main() {
var somestring string
var truefalse bool
options := make(map[string]string)
stringslice := []string{}
op := optionparser.NewOptionParser()
op.On("-a", "--func", "call myfunc", myfunc)
op.On("--bstring FOO", "set string to FOO", &somestring)
op.On("-c", "set boolean option (try -no-c)", options)
op.On("-d", "--dlong VAL", "set option", options)
op.On("-e", "--elong [VAL]", "set option with optional parameter", options)
op.On("-f", "boolean option", &truefalse)
op.On("-g VALUES", "give multiple values", &stringslice)
op.Command("y", "Run command y")
op.Command("z", "Run command z")
err := op.Parse()
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Printf("string `somestring' is now %q\n", somestring)
fmt.Printf("options %v\n", options)
fmt.Printf("-f %v\n", truefalse)
fmt.Printf("-g %v\n", stringslice)
fmt.Printf("Extra: %#v\n", op.Extra)
}
and the output of go run main.go -a --bstring foo -c -d somevalue -e x -f -g a,b,c y z
is:
myfunc called
string `somestring' is now "foo"
options map[c:true dlong:somevalue elong:x]
-f true
-g [a b c]
Extra: []string{"y", "z"}
State: Actively maintained, and used in production. Without warranty, of course.
Maturity level: 5/5 (works well in all tested repositories, there will be no API change)
License: Free software (MIT License)
Installation: Just run go get github.com/speedata/optionparser
API documentation: https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/speedata/optionparser
Contact: [email protected], @[email protected]
Repository: https://github.com/speedata/optionparser
Dependencies: None
Contribution: We like to get any kind of feedback (success stories, bug reports, merge requests, ...)