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Simple command line argument parsing library

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zig-clap

A simple and easy to use command line argument parser library for Zig.

Looking for a version that works with zig master? The zig-master branch has you covered. It is maintained by people who live at head (not me) and is merged into master on every zig release.

Features

  • Short arguments -a
    • Chaining -abc where a and b does not take values.
  • Long arguments --long
  • Supports both passing values using spacing and = (-a 100, -a=100)
    • Short args also support passing values with no spacing or = (-a100)
    • This all works with chaining (-ba 100, -ba=100, -ba100)
  • Supports options that can be specified multiple times (-e 1 -e 2 -e 3)
  • Print help message from parameter specification.
  • Parse help message to parameter specification.

Examples

clap.parse

The simplest way to use this library is to just call the clap.parse function.

const clap = @import("clap");
const std = @import("std");

const debug = std.debug;
const io = std.io;

pub fn main() !void {
    // First we specify what parameters our program can take.
    // We can use `parseParam` to parse a string to a `Param(Help)`
    const params = comptime [_]clap.Param(clap.Help){
        clap.parseParam("-h, --help             Display this help and exit.              ") catch unreachable,
        clap.parseParam("-n, --number <NUM>     An option parameter, which takes a value.") catch unreachable,
        clap.parseParam("-s, --string <STR>...  An option parameter which can be specified multiple times.") catch unreachable,
        clap.parseParam("<POS>...") catch unreachable,
    };

    // Initalize our diagnostics, which can be used for reporting useful errors.
    // This is optional. You can also pass `.{}` to `clap.parse` if you don't
    // care about the extra information `Diagnostics` provides.
    var diag = clap.Diagnostic{};
    var args = clap.parse(clap.Help, &params, .{ .diagnostic = &diag }) catch |err| {
        // Report useful error and exit
        diag.report(io.getStdErr().writer(), err) catch {};
        return err;
    };
    defer args.deinit();

    if (args.flag("--help"))
        debug.warn("--help\n", .{});
    if (args.option("--number")) |n|
        debug.warn("--number = {s}\n", .{n});
    for (args.options("--string")) |s|
        debug.warn("--string = {s}\n", .{s});
    for (args.positionals()) |pos|
        debug.warn("{s}\n", .{pos});
}

The data structure returned has lookup speed on par with array access (arr[i]) and validates that the strings you pass to option, options and flag are actually parameters that the program can take:

const clap = @import("clap");
const std = @import("std");

pub fn main() !void {
    const params = comptime [_]clap.Param(clap.Help){
        clap.parseParam("-h, --help  Display this help and exit.") catch unreachable,
    };

    var args = try clap.parse(clap.Help, &params, .{});
    defer args.deinit();

    _ = args.flag("--helps");
}
zig-clap/clap/comptime.zig:109:17: error: --helps is not a parameter.
                @compileError(name ++ " is not a parameter.");
                ^
zig-clap/clap/comptime.zig:77:45: note: called from here
            const param = comptime findParam(name);
                                            ^
zig-clap/clap.zig:238:31: note: called from here
            return a.clap.flag(name);
                              ^
zig-clap/example/simple-error.zig:16:18: note: called from here
    _ = args.flag("--helps");

There is also a parseEx variant that takes an argument iterator.

StreamingClap

The StreamingClap is the base of all the other parsers. It's a streaming parser that uses an args.Iterator to provide it with arguments lazily.

const clap = @import("clap");
const std = @import("std");

const debug = std.debug;
const io = std.io;

pub fn main() !void {
    const allocator = std.heap.page_allocator;

    // First we specify what parameters our program can take.
    const params = [_]clap.Param(u8){
        .{
            .id = 'h',
            .names = .{ .short = 'h', .long = "help" },
        },
        .{
            .id = 'n',
            .names = .{ .short = 'n', .long = "number" },
            .takes_value = .one,
        },
        .{ .id = 'f', .takes_value = .one },
    };

    // We then initialize an argument iterator. We will use the OsIterator as it nicely
    // wraps iterating over arguments the most efficient way on each os.
    var iter = try clap.args.OsIterator.init(allocator);
    defer iter.deinit();

    // Initalize our diagnostics, which can be used for reporting useful errors.
    // This is optional. You can also leave the `diagnostic` field unset if you
    // don't care about the extra information `Diagnostic` provides.
    var diag = clap.Diagnostic{};
    var parser = clap.StreamingClap(u8, clap.args.OsIterator){
        .params = &params,
        .iter = &iter,
        .diagnostic = &diag,
    };

    // Because we use a streaming parser, we have to consume each argument parsed individually.
    while (parser.next() catch |err| {
        // Report useful error and exit
        diag.report(io.getStdErr().writer(), err) catch {};
        return err;
    }) |arg| {
        // arg.param will point to the parameter which matched the argument.
        switch (arg.param.id) {
            'h' => debug.warn("Help!\n", .{}),
            'n' => debug.warn("--number = {s}\n", .{arg.value.?}),

            // arg.value == null, if arg.param.takes_value == .none.
            // Otherwise, arg.value is the value passed with the argument, such as "-a=10"
            // or "-a 10".
            'f' => debug.warn("{s}\n", .{arg.value.?}),
            else => unreachable,
        }
    }
}

Currently, this parse is the only parser that allow an array of Param tha is generated at runtime.

help

The help, helpEx and helpFull are functions for printing a simple list of all parameters the program can take.

const clap = @import("clap");
const std = @import("std");

pub fn main() !void {
    // clap.help is a function that can print a simple help message, given a
    // slice of Param(Help). There is also a helpEx, which can print a
    // help message for any Param, but it is more verbose to call.
    try clap.help(
        std.io.getStdErr().writer(),
        comptime &.{
            clap.parseParam("-h, --help     Display this help and exit.         ") catch unreachable,
            clap.parseParam("-v, --version  Output version information and exit.") catch unreachable,
        },
    );
}
	-h, --help   	Display this help and exit.
	-v, --version	Output version information and exit.

The help functions are the simplest to call. It only takes an OutStream and a slice of Param(Help).

The helpEx is the generic version of help. It can print a help message for any Param give that the caller provides functions for getting the help and value strings.

The helpFull is even more generic, allowing the functions that get the help and value strings to return errors and take a context as a parameter.

usage

The usage, usageEx and usageFull are functions for printing a small abbreviated version of the help message.

const clap = @import("clap");
const std = @import("std");

pub fn main() !void {
    // clap.usage is a function that can print a simple usage message, given a
    // slice of Param(Help). There is also a usageEx, which can print a
    // usage message for any Param, but it is more verbose to call.
    try clap.usage(
        std.io.getStdErr().writer(),
        comptime &.{
            clap.parseParam("-h, --help       Display this help and exit.              ") catch unreachable,
            clap.parseParam("-v, --version    Output version information and exit.     ") catch unreachable,
            clap.parseParam("    --value <N>  An option parameter, which takes a value.") catch unreachable,
        },
    );
}
[-hv] [--value <N>]

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