ocaml/stdlib/arg.mli

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1.9 KiB
OCaml

(* Parsing of command line arguments. *)
(* This module provides a general mechanism for extracting options and
arguments from the command line to the program. *)
(* Syntax of command lines:
A keyword is a character string starting with a [-].
An option is a keyword alone or followed by an argument.
There are four types of keywords: Unit, String, Int, and Float.
Unit keywords do not take an argument.
String, Int, and Float keywords take the following word on the command line
as an argument.
Arguments not preceded by a keyword are called anonymous arguments. *)
(* Examples ([cmd] is assumed to be the command name):
- [cmd -flag ](a unit option)
- [cmd -int 1 ](an int option with argument [1])
- [cmd -string foobar ](a string option with argument ["foobar"])
- [cmd -float 12.34 ](a float option with argument [12.34])
- [cmd 1 2 3 ](three anonymous arguments: ["1"], ["2"], and ["3"])
- [cmd 1 2 -flag 3 -string bar 4]
- [ ](four anonymous arguments, a unit option, and
- [ ] a string option with argument ["bar"])
*)
type spec =
String of (string -> unit)
| Int of (int -> unit)
| Unit of (unit -> unit)
| Float of (float -> unit)
(* The concrete type describing the behavior associated
with a keyword. *)
val parse : (string * spec) list -> (string -> unit) -> unit
(* [parse speclist anonfun] parses the command line,
calling the functions in [speclist] whenever appropriate,
and [anonfun] on anonymous arguments.
The functions are called in the same order as they appear
on the command line.
The strings in the [(string * spec) list] are keywords and must
start with a [-], else they are ignored. *)
exception Bad of string
(* Functions in [speclist] or [anonfun] can raise [Bad] with
an error message to reject invalid arguments. *)