164 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
164 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
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# Arg
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`arg` is yet another command line option parser.
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## Installation
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Use Yarn or NPM to install.
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```console
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$ yarn add arg
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```
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or
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```console
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$ npm install arg
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```
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## Usage
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`arg()` takes either 1 or 2 arguments:
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1. Command line specification object (see below)
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2. Parse options (_Optional_, defaults to `{permissive: false, argv: process.argv.slice(2)}`)
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It returns an object with any values present on the command-line (missing options are thus
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missing from the resulting object). Arg performs no validation/requirement checking - we
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leave that up to the application.
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All parameters that aren't consumed by options (commonly referred to as "extra" parameters)
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are added to `result._`, which is _always_ an array (even if no extra parameters are passed,
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in which case an empty array is returned).
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```javascript
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const arg = require('arg');
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// `argument_array` is an optional parameter
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const args = arg(spec, options = {permissive: false, argv: process.argv.slice(2)}]);
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```
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For example:
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```console
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$ node ./hello.js --port=1234 -n 'My name' foo bar --tag qux --tag=qix -- --foobar
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```
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```javascript
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// hello.js
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const arg = require('arg');
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const args = arg({
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// Types
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'--help': Boolean,
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'--version': Boolean,
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'--port': Number, // --port <number> or --port=<number>
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'--name': String, // --name <string> or --name=<string>
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'--tag': [String], // --tag <string> or --tag=<string>
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// Aliases
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'-v': '--version',
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'-n': '--name', // -n <string>; result is stored in --name
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'--label': '--name' // --label <string> or --label=<string>;
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// result is stored in --name
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});
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console.log(args);
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/*
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{
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_: ["foo", "bar", "--foobar"],
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'--port': 1234,
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'--name': "My name",
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'--tag': ["qux", "qix"]
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}
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*/
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```
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The values for each key=>value pair is either a type (function or [function]) or a string (indicating an alias).
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- In the case of a function, the string value of the argument's value is passed to it,
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and the return value is used as the ultimate value.
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- In the case of an array, the only element _must_ be a type function. Array types indicate
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that the argument may be passed multiple times, and as such the resulting value in the returned
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object is an array with all of the values that were passed using the specified flag.
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- In the case of a string, an alias is established. If a flag is passed that matches the _key_,
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then the _value_ is substituted in its place.
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Type functions are passed three arguments:
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1. The parameter value (always a string)
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2. The parameter name (e.g. `--label`)
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3. The previous value for the destination (useful for reduce-like operatons or for supporting `-v` multiple times, etc.)
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This means the built-in `String`, `Number`, and `Boolean` type constructors "just work" as type functions.
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### Options
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If a second parameter is specified and is an object, it specifies parsing options to modify the behavior of `arg()`.
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#### `argv`
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If you have already sliced or generated a number of raw arguments to be parsed (as opposed to letting `arg`
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slice them from `process.argv`) you may specify them in the `argv` option.
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For example:
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```javascript
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const args = arg(
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{
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'--foo': String
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}, {
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argv: ['hello', '--foo', 'world']
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}
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);
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```
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results in:
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```javascript
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const args = {
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_: ['hello'],
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'--foo': 'world'
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};
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```
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#### `permissive`
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When `permissive` set to `true`, `arg` will push any unknown arguments
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onto the "extra" argument array (`result._`) instead of throwing an error about
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an unknown flag.
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For example:
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```javascript
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const arg = require('arg');
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const argv = ['--foo', 'hello', '--qux', 'qix', '--bar', '12345', 'hello again'];
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const args = arg(
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{
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'--foo': String,
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'--bar': Number
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}, {
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argv,
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permissive: true
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}
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);
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```
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results in:
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```javascript
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const args = {
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_: ['--qux', 'qix', 'hello again'],
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'--foo': 'hello',
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'--bar': 12345
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}
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```
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# License
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Copyright © 2017-2018 by ZEIT, Inc. Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE.md).
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