12 releases (breaking)
Uses old Rust 2015
0.8.0 | Nov 29, 2018 |
---|---|
0.6.0 | Nov 14, 2018 |
#836 in Command-line interface
72KB
1K
SLoC
commandlines for Rust
About
commandlines
is a command line argument parsing library for Rust command line interface application development. The goal is to support most POSIX/GNU program argument syntax conventions.
The project is in development and the library API is not stable. Please see the developer documentation at https://docs.rs/commandlines.
Current POSIX/GNU Argument Syntax Convention Support
Available
- Arguments are options if they begin with a hyphen delimiter (
-
) - Option names are single alphanumeric characters
- Options typically precede other non-option arguments
- The argument
--
terminates all options; any following arguments are treated as non-option arguments, even if they begin with a hyphen - Options may be supplied in any order, or appear multiple times. The interpretation is left up to the particular application program
- Long options consist of
--
followed by a name made of alphanumeric characters and dashes. Option names are typically one to three words long, with hyphens to separate words - To specify an argument for a long option, write ‘--name=value’. This syntax enables a long option to accept an argument that is itself optional
- Certain options require an argument. For example, the ‘-o’ command of the ld command requires an argument—an output file name
- A token consisting of a single hyphen character is interpreted as an ordinary non-option argument. By convention, it is used to specify input from or output to the standard input and output streams.
- Multiple options may follow a hyphen delimiter in a single token if the options do not take arguments. Thus,
-abc
is equivalent to-a -b -c
Not Available Yet
- An option and its argument may or may not appear as separate tokens. (In other words, the whitespace separating them is optional.) Thus, ‘-o foo’ and ‘-ofoo’ are equivalent.