argwerk

Documentation Crates Actions Status

Define a simple command-line parser through a declarative macro.

This is not intended to be a complete command-line parser library. Instead this can be used as an alternative quick-and-dirty approach that can be cheaply incorporated into a tool.

For a more complete command-line parsing library, use [clap].

We provide: * A dependency-free command-line parsing framework using declarative macros. * A flexible mechanism for parsing. * Formatting of decent looking help messages.

We do not provide: * As-close-to correct line wrapping with wide unicode characters as possible (see [textwrap]). * Complex command structures like subcommands. * Parsing into [OsString]s. The default parser will panic in case not valid unicode is passed into it in accordance with [std::env::args].

For how to use, see the documentation of [argwerk::define] and [argwerk::args].

Examples

Initially when you're adding arguments to your program you can use [argwerk::args]. This allows for easily parsing out a handful of optional parameters.

This example is available as simple: sh cargo run --example simple -- --limit 20

```rust let args = argwerk::args! { /// A simple tool. "tool [-h]" { help: bool, limit: usize = 10, } /// The limit of the operation. (default: 10). ["-l" | "--limit", int] => { limit = str::parse(&int)?; } /// Print this help. ["-h" | "--help"] => { println!("{}", HELP); help = true; } }?;

if args.help { return Ok(()); }

dbg!(args); ```

After a while you might want to graduate to defining a named struct containing the arguments. This can be useful if you want to pass the arguments around.

This example is available as tour: sh cargo run --example tour -- --help

```rust argwerk::define! { /// A command touring the capabilities of argwerk. #[usage = "tour [-h]"] struct Args { help: bool, #[required = "--file must be specified"] file: String, input: Option, limit: usize = 10, positional: Option<(String, Option)>, rest: Vec, } /// Prints the help. /// /// This includes: /// * All the available switches. /// * All the available positional arguments. /// * Whatever else the developer decided to put in here! We even support wrapping comments which are overly long. ["-h" | "--help"] => { println!("{}", Args::help()); help = true; } /// Limit the number of things by (default: 10). ["--limit" | "-l", n] => { limit = str::parse(&n)?; } /// Write to the file specified by . ["--file", path] if !file.issome() => { file = Some(path); } /// Read from the specified input. ["--input", #[option] path] => { input = path; } /// Takes argument at and . /// /// * This is an indented message. The first alphanumeric character determines the indentation to use. [foo, #[option] bar, #[rest] args] if positional.isnone() => { positional = Some((foo, bar)); rest = args; } }

// Note: we're using parse here instead of args since it works better // with the example. let args = Args::parse(vec!["--file", "foo.txt", "--input", "-"])?;

dbg!(args); ```

License: MIT/Apache-2.0