| commit | 62f283a7caef853dbcf816896a93be87a0d1758f | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Kevin K <kbknapp@gmail.com> | Wed Jul 29 22:32:37 2015 |
| committer | Kevin K <kbknapp@gmail.com> | Wed Jul 29 22:32:37 2015 |
| tree | e09188f613d91f7f17724a7e3a6d17f276abdeec | |
| parent | a2ff664ad7236b24d0a1c512d012be9f9d36e765 [diff] |
chore: increase version
Command Line Argument Parser for Rust
It is a simple to use, efficient, and full featured library for parsing command line arguments and subcommands when writing console, or terminal applications.
If you're already familiar with clap but just want to see some new highlights as of 1.1.3
clap on Windows again!{n} and not \n due to how clap handles help parsing.docopt or getopts where what clap calls “options” and “flags” are combined into a single group (and still properly aligned and formatted)--version or -V with the same version as the parent application--version and -V won't be valid flags for subcommandsFor full details see the changelog
clap is used to parse and validate the string of command line arguments provided by the user at runtime. You provide the list of valid possibilities, and clap handles the rest. This means you focus on your applications functionality, and less on the parsing and validating of arguments.
clap also provides the traditional version and help switches (or flags) ‘for free’ meaning automatically with no configuration. It does this by checking list of valid possibilities you supplied and if you haven't them already (or only defined some of them), clap will auto-generate the applicable ones. If you are using subcommands, clap will also auto-generate a help subcommand for you in addition to the traditional flags.
Once clap parses the user provided string of arguments, it returns the matches along with any applicable values. If the user made an error or typo, clap informs them of the mistake and exits gracefully. Because of this, you can make reasonable assumptions in your code about the validity of the arguments.
Below are a few of the features which clap supports, full descriptions and usage can be found in the documentation and examples/ directory
-f and --flag respectively)-fBgoZ is the same as -f -B -g -o -Z)-vvv or -v -v -v)myprog <file>... such as myprog file1.txt file2.txt being two values for the same “file” argument)-- meaning, only positional arguments follow-o value and --option value or --option=value respectively)-o <value> -o <other_value> or the shorthand -o <value> <other_value>)-o <name> <other_name> etc. for when you require specific multiple valuesgit add <file> where add is a sub-command of git)--mode option which may only have one of two values fast or slow such as --mode fast or --mode slow)clap you can achieve this exact functionality from Rust's Option<&str>.unwrap_or("some default") method (or Result<T,String>.unwrap_or(T) when using typed values)clap is fully compatible with Rust's env!() macro for automatically setting the version of your application to the version in your Cargo.toml. See examples/09_AutoVersion.rs for how to do this (Thanks to jhelwig for pointing this out)clap to get typed values (i.e. i32, u8, etc.) from positional or option arguments so long as the type you request implements std::str::FromStr See the examples/12_TypedValues.rs. You can also use claps simple_enum! or arg_enum! macro to create an enum with variants that automatically implements std::str::FromStr. See examples/13a_EnumValuesAutomatic.rs for details and performs an ascii case insensitive parse from a string->enum.--myoption <value> argument, and the user mistakenly typed --moyption value (notice y and o switched), they would receive a Did you mean '--myoption' ? error and exit gracefully. This also works for subcommands and flags. (Thanks to Byron for the implementation) (This feature can optionally be disabled, see ‘Optional Dependencies / Features’)The following two examples show a quick example of some of the very basic functionality of clap. For more advanced usage, such as requirements, exclusions, groups, multiple values and occurrences see the video tutorials, documentation, or examples/ directory of this repository.
NOTE: Both examples are functionally the same, but show two different styles in which to use clap
// (Full example with detailed comments in examples/01a_QuickExample.rs) // // This example demonstrates clap's "usage strings" method of creating arguments which is less // less verbose extern crate clap; use clap::{Arg, App, SubCommand}; fn main() { let matches = App::new("myapp") .version("1.0") .author("Kevin K. <kbknapp@gmail.com>") .about("Does awesome things") .args_from_usage( "-c --config=[CONFIG] 'Sets a custom config file' <INPUT> 'Sets the input file to use' [debug]... -d 'Sets the level of debugging information'") .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("test") .about("controls testing features") .version("1.3") .author("Someone E. <someone_else@other.com>") .arg_from_usage("-v --verbose 'Print test information verbosely'")) .get_matches(); // Calling .unwrap() is safe here because "INPUT" is required (if "INPUT" wasn't // required we could have used an 'if let' to conditionally get the value) println!("Using input file: {}", matches.value_of("INPUT").unwrap()); // Gets a value for config if supplied by user, or defaults to "default.conf" let config = matches.value_of("CONFIG").unwrap_or("default.conf"); println!("Value for config: {}", config); // Vary the output based on how many times the user used the "debug" flag // (i.e. 'myapp -d -d -d' or 'myapp -ddd' vs 'myapp -d' match matches.occurrences_of("debug") { 0 => println!("Debug mode is off"), 1 => println!("Debug mode is kind of on"), 2 => println!("Debug mode is on"), 3 | _ => println!("Don't be crazy"), } // You can information about subcommands by requesting their matches by name // (as below), requesting just the name used, or both at the same time if let Some(matches) = matches.subcommand_matches("test") { if matches.is_present("verbose") { println!("Printing verbosely..."); } else { println!("Printing normally..."); } } // more porgram logic goes here... }
The following example is functionally the same as the one above, but this method allows more advanced configuration options (not shown in this small example), or even dynamically generating arguments when desired. Both methods can be used together to get the best of both worlds (see the documentation, examples, or video tutorials).
// (Full example with detailed comments in examples/01b_QuickExample.rs) // // This example demonstrates clap's full 'builder pattern' style of creating arguments which is // more verbose, but allows easier editting, and at times more advanced options, or the possibility // to generate arguments dynamically. extern crate clap; use clap::{Arg, App, SubCommand}; fn main() { let matches = App::new("myapp") .version("1.0") .author("Kevin K. <kbknapp@gmail.com>") .about("Does awesome things") .arg(Arg::with_name("CONFIG") .short("c") .long("config") .help("Sets a custom config file") .takes_value(true)) .arg(Arg::with_name("INPUT") .help("Sets the input file to use") .required(true) .index(1)) .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") .short("d") .multiple(true) .help("Sets the level of debugging information")) .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("test") .about("controls testing features") .version("1.3") .author("Someone E. <someone_else@other.com>") .arg(Arg::with_name("verbose") .short("v") .help("print test information verbosely"))) .get_matches(); // Calling .unwrap() is safe here because "INPUT" is required (if "INPUT" wasn't // required we could have used an 'if let' to conditionally get the value) println!("Using input file: {}", matches.value_of("INPUT").unwrap()); // Gets a value for config if supplied by user, or defaults to "default.conf" let config = matches.value_of("CONFIG").unwrap_or("default.conf"); println!("Value for config: {}", config); // Vary the output based on how many times the user used the "debug" flag // (i.e. 'myapp -d -d -d' or 'myapp -ddd' vs 'myapp -d' match matches.occurrences_of("debug") { 0 => println!("Debug mode is off"), 1 => println!("Debug mode is kind of on"), 2 => println!("Debug mode is on"), 3 | _ => println!("Don't be crazy"), } // You can information about subcommands by requesting their matches by name // (as below), requesting just the name used, or both at the same time if let Some(matches) = matches.subcommand_matches("test") { if matches.is_present("verbose") { println!("Printing verbosely..."); } else { println!("Printing normally..."); } } // more program logic goes here... }
If you were to compile either of the above programs and run them with the flag --help or -h (or help subcommand, since we defined test as a subcommand) the following would be output
$ myapp --help myapp 1.0 Kevin K. <kbknapp@gmail.com> Does awesome things USAGE: MyApp [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <INPUT> [SUBCOMMAND] FLAGS: -d Turn debugging information on -h, --help Prints this message -V, --version Prints version information OPTIONS: -c, --config <CONFIG> Sets a custom config file ARGS: INPUT The input file to use SUBCOMMANDS: help Prints this message test Controls testing features
NOTE: You could also run myapp test --help to see similar output and options for the test subcommand.
To try out the pre-built example use the following stes:
$ git clone https://github.com/kbknapp/clap-rs && cd clap-rs/clap-tests$ cargo build --release$ ./target/release/claptests --helpTo test out clap's default auto-generated help/version follow these steps:
$ cargo new fake --bin && cd fakeclap to your Cargo.toml[dependencies] clap = "*"
src/main.rsextern crate clap; use clap::App; fn main() { let _ = App::new("fake").version("v1.0-beta").get_matches(); }
$ cargo build --release$ ./target/release/fake --help or $ ./target/release/fake --versionFor full usage, add clap as a dependecy in your Cargo.toml file to use from crates.io:
[dependencies] clap = "*"
Or track the latest on the master branch at github:
[dependencies.clap] git = "https://github.com/kbknapp/clap-rs.git"
Add extern crate clap; to your crate root.
Define a list of valid arguments for your program (see the documentation or examples/ directory of this repo)
Then run cargo build or cargo update && cargo build for your project.
If you'd like to keep your dependency list to only clap, you can disable any features that require an additional dependency. To do this, add this to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies.clap] version = "*" default-features = false
You can also selectively enable only the features you'd like to include, by adding:
[dependencies.clap] version = "*" default-features = false # Cherry-pick the features you'd like to use features = [ "suggestions", "color" ]
The following is a list of optional clap features:
Did you mean '--myoption' ? feature for when users make typos.You can find complete documentation on the github-pages site for this project.
You can also find usage examples in the examples/ directory of this repo.
There‘s also the video tutorial series Argument Parsing with Rust that I’ve been working on.
Note: Two new videos have just been added (08 From Usage, and 09 Typed Values), if you're already familiar with clap but want to know more about these two details you can check out those videos without watching the previous few.
Note: Apologies for the resolution of the first video, it will be updated to a better resolution soon. The other videos have a proper resolution.
Contributions are always welcome! And there is a multitude of ways in which you can help depending on what you like to do, or are good at. Anything from documentation, code cleanup, issue completion, new features, you name it, even filing issues is contributing and greatly appreciated!
clapgit clone https://github.com/$YOUR_USERNAME/clap-rs && cd clap-rs)git checkout -b new-branch)git commit -am "your message")TYPE(COMPONENT): MESSAGE where TYPE is one of the following:feat - A new featureimp - An improvement to an existing featureperf - A performance improvementdocs - Changes to documentation onlytests - Changes to the testing framework or tests onlyfix - A bug fixrefactor - Code functionality doesn't change, but underlying structure maystyle - Stylistic changes only, no functionality changeswip - A work in progress commit (Should typically be git rebase'ed away)chore - Catch all or things that have to do with the build system, etcCOMPONENT is optional, and may be a single file, directory, or logical component. Can be omitted if commit applies globallycargo test && make -C clap-tests test)git rebase into concise commits and remove --fixups (git rebase -i HEAD~NUM where NUM is number of commits back)git push origin $your-branch)Another really great way to help is if you find an interesting, or helpful way in which to use clap. You can either add it to the examples/ directory, or file an issue and tell me. I'm all about giving credit where credit is due :)
If contributing, you can run the tests as follows (assuming you're in the clap-rs directory)
cargo test && make -C clap-tests test
There are a few goals of clap that I‘d like to maintain throughout contributions. If your proposed changes break, or go against any of these goals we’ll discuss the changes further before merging (but will not be ignored, all contributes are welcome!). These are by no means hard-and-fast rules, as I'm no expert and break them myself from time to time (even if by mistake or ignorance :P).
clap should be low since the main program is the star of the showpanic! on developer error, exit gracefully on end-user errorclap is licensed under the MIT license. Please read the LICENSE-MIT file in this repository for more information.
Although I do my best to keep breaking changes to a minimum, being that this a sub 1.0 library, there are breaking changes from time to time in order to support better features or implementation. For the full details see the changelog.md
version has changed from -v to -V (Uppercase). Although you can also now override the short flag for help and version using App::help_short() and App::version_short()Arg::possible_values(), Arg::value_names(), Arg::requires_all(), Arg::mutually_excludes_all() [deprecated], Arg::conflicts_with_all()
Vec<&str>, instead they take a generic IntoIterator<Item=AsRef<str>> which means you cannot use an inline vec![] but it means the methods are now far more flexible, especially for dynamic value generation.IntoIterator trait, or something like:let my_vals = ["value1", "value2", "value3"]; ... .possible_values(&my_vals)
Old method names will be left around for some time.
SubCommand::new() -> SubCommand::with_name()App::error_on_no_subcommand() -> App::subcommand_required()Arg::new() -> Arg::with_name()Arg::mutually_excludes() -> Arg::conflicts_with()Arg::mutually_excludes_all() -> Arg::conflicts_with_all()