ocaml/stdlib/arg.mli

105 lines
5.2 KiB
OCaml

(***********************************************************************)
(* *)
(* Objective Caml *)
(* *)
(* Damien Doligez, projet Para, INRIA Rocquencourt *)
(* *)
(* Copyright 1996 Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et *)
(* en Automatique. All rights reserved. This file is distributed *)
(* under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License, with *)
(* the special exception on linking described in file ../LICENSE. *)
(* *)
(***********************************************************************)
(* $Id$ *)
(** 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.
The types of keywords are: [Unit], [Set], [Clear], [String],
[Int], [Float], and [Rest]. [Unit], [Set] and [Clear] keywords take
no argument. [String], [Int], and [Float] keywords take the following
word on the command line as an argument. A [Rest] keyword takes the
remaining of the command line as (string) arguments.
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 a b c ](three anonymous arguments: ["a"], ["b"], and ["c"])
- [cmd a b -- c d ](two anonymous arguments and a rest option with
two arguments)
*)
type spec =
Unit of (unit -> unit) (** Call the function with unit argument *)
| Set of bool ref (** Set the reference to true *)
| Clear of bool ref (** Set the reference to false *)
| String of (string -> unit) (** Call the function with a string argument *)
| Set_string of string ref (** Set the reference to the string argument *)
| Int of (int -> unit) (** Call the function with an int argument *)
| Set_int of int ref (** Set the reference to the int argument *)
| Float of (float -> unit) (** Call the function with a float argument *)
| Set_float of float ref (** Set the reference to the float argument *)
| Symbol of string list * (string -> unit)
(** Take one of the symbols as argument and
call the function with the symbol. *)
| Rest of (string -> unit) (** Stop interpreting keywords and call the
function with each remaining argument *)
(** The concrete type describing the behavior associated
with a keyword. *)
val parse :
(string * spec * string) list -> (string -> unit) -> string -> unit
(** [Arg.parse speclist anonfun usage_msg] parses the command line.
[speclist] is a list of triples [(key, spec, doc)].
[key] is the option keyword, it must start with a ['-'] character.
[spec] gives the option type and the function to call when this option
is found on the command line.
[doc] is a one-line description of this option.
[anonfun] is called on anonymous arguments.
The functions in [spec] and [anonfun] are called in the same order
as their arguments appear on the command line.
If an error occurs, [Arg.parse] exits the program, after printing
an error message as follows:
- The reason for the error: unknown option, invalid or missing argument, etc.
- [usage_msg]
- The list of options, each followed by the corresponding [doc] string.
For the user to be able to specify anonymous arguments starting with a
[-], include for example [("-", String anonfun, doc)] in [speclist].
By default, [parse] recognizes two unit options, [-help] and [--help],
which will display [usage_msg] and the list of options, and exit
the program. You can override this behaviour by specifying your
own [-help] and [--help] options in [speclist].
*)
val parse_argv : string array ->
(string * spec * string) list -> (string -> unit) -> string -> unit
(** [Arg.parse_argv args speclist anonfun usage_msg] parses array [args] as
if it were the command line. *)
exception Bad of string
(** Functions in [spec] or [anonfun] can raise [Arg.Bad] with an error
message to reject invalid arguments. *)
val usage : (string * spec * string) list -> string -> unit
(** [Arg.usage speclist usage_msg] prints an error message including
the list of valid options. This is the same message that
{!Arg.parse} prints in case of error.
[speclist] and [usage_msg] are the same as for [Arg.parse]. *)
val current : int ref
(** Position (in {!Sys.argv}) of the argument being processed. You can
change this value, e.g. to force {!Arg.parse} to skip some arguments.*)