module Arg:sig
..end
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
, Bool
, Set
, Clear
,
String
, Set_string
, Int
, Set_int
, Float
, Set_float
,
Tuple
, Symbol
, and Rest
.
Unit
, Set
and Clear
keywords take no argument. A Rest
keyword takes the remaining of the command line as arguments.
Every other keyword takes the following word on the command line
as argument. For compatibility with GNU getopt_long, keyword=arg
is also allowed.
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 |
(* |
Call the function with unit argument
| *) |
| |
Bool of |
(* |
Call the function with a bool argument
| *) |
| |
Set of |
(* |
Set the reference to true
| *) |
| |
Clear of |
(* |
Set the reference to false
| *) |
| |
String of |
(* |
Call the function with a string argument
| *) |
| |
Set_string of |
(* |
Set the reference to the string argument
| *) |
| |
Int of |
(* |
Call the function with an int argument
| *) |
| |
Set_int of |
(* |
Set the reference to the int argument
| *) |
| |
Float of |
(* |
Call the function with a float argument
| *) |
| |
Set_float of |
(* |
Set the reference to the float argument
| *) |
| |
Tuple of |
(* |
Take several arguments according to the
spec list
| *) |
| |
Symbol of |
(* |
Take one of the symbols as argument and
call the function with the symbol
| *) |
| |
Rest of |
(* |
Stop interpreting keywords and call the
function with each remaining argument
| *) |
typekey =
string
typedoc =
string
typeusage_msg =
string
typeanon_fun =
string -> unit
val parse : (key * spec * doc) list -> anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit
Arg.parse speclist anon_fun 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.
anon_fun
is called on anonymous arguments.
The functions in spec
and anon_fun
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
to standard error an error message as follows:
usage_msg
doc
string.
Beware: options that have an empty doc
string will not be included in the
list.-
, include for example ("-", String anon_fun, doc)
in speclist
.
By default, parse
recognizes two unit options, -help
and --help
,
which will print to standard output 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_dynamic : (key * spec * doc) list ref ->
anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit
Arg.parse
, except that the speclist
argument is a reference
and may be updated during the parsing. A typical use for this feature
is to parse command lines of the form:options
where the list of options depends on the value of the subcommand argument.val parse_argv : ?current:int ref ->
string array ->
(key * spec * doc) list -> anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit
Arg.parse_argv ~current args speclist anon_fun usage_msg
parses
the array args
as if it were the command line. It uses and updates
the value of ~current
(if given), or Arg.current
. You must set
it before calling parse_argv
. The initial value of current
is the index of the program name (argument 0) in the array.
If an error occurs, Arg.parse_argv
raises Arg.Bad
with
the error message as argument. If option -help
or --help
is
given, Arg.parse_argv
raises Arg.Help
with the help message
as argument.val parse_argv_dynamic : ?current:int ref ->
string array ->
(key * spec * doc) list ref ->
anon_fun -> string -> unit
Arg.parse_argv
, except that the speclist
argument is a
reference and may be updated during the parsing.
See Arg.parse_dynamic
.exception Help of string
Arg.parse_argv
when the user asks for help.exception Bad of string
spec
or anon_fun
can raise Arg.Bad
with an error
message to reject invalid arguments.
Arg.Bad
is also raised by Arg.parse_argv
in case of an error.val usage : (key * spec * doc) list -> usage_msg -> unit
Arg.usage speclist usage_msg
prints to standard error
an error message that includes 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 usage_string : (key * spec * doc) list -> usage_msg -> string
Arg.usage
,
if provided with the same parameters.val align : ?limit:int ->
(key * spec * doc) list -> (key * spec * doc) list
Symbol
arguments are aligned on the next line.limit
: options with keyword and message longer than
limit
will not be used to compute the alignement.val current : int ref
Sys.argv
) of the argument being processed. You can
change this value, e.g. to force Arg.parse
to skip some arguments.
Arg.parse
uses the initial value of Arg.current
as the index of
argument 0 (the program name) and starts parsing arguments
at the next element.