Description

Command-line argument handling facilities, layered on SRFI 37 (args-fold).

Author

Jim Ursetto

Version

Requires

Usage

(require-extension args)

Download

args.egg

Documentation

This extension provides a wrapper around SRFI 37 (args-fold). The main goal is to let the user parse command-line arguments without having to write a lot of similar support code every time.

By default, options and operands (non-options) are collected into two lists and returned by the parser, and unrecognized options complain and display help. Therefore, it is very possible not to write any option-procs, operand-procs, or unrecognized-procs as required by SRFI 37. However, the capability to customize is there should you need it.

Additionally, the help text for your options can be generated for you, so your options and usage information don't get out of sync.

Creating options

macro: (args:make-option (OPTION-NAME ...) ARG-DATA [BODY])

Make an args:option record, suitable for passing to args:parse.

OPTION-NAME ... is a sequence of short or long option names. They must be literal symbols; single-character symbols become short options, and longer symbols become long options. So (args:make-option (c cookie) ...) specifies a short option -c and long option --cookie. Under the hood, (c cookie) becomes '(#\c "cookie"), as expected by SRFI 37's OPTION.

ARG-DATA is either a pair (ARG-TYPE ARG-NAME) or a plain keyword ARG-TYPE. ARG-TYPE is a keyword that specifies whether the option takes an argument:

#:required Argument is required
#:optional Argument is optional
#:none No argument (actually, any other value than #:required or #:optional is interpreted as #:none)

ARG-NAME, if provided, is a string specifying the name of the argument. This name is used in the help text produced by args:usage.

BODY is an optional sequence of statements executed when this option is encountered. Behind the scenes, BODY is wrapped in code which adds the current option and its argument to the final options alist. So, simply leave BODY blank and options will be collected for you. BODY is an option-processor as defined in SRFI 37, and has access to the variables OPT (the current #<option>), NAME (the option name) and ARG (argument value or #f).

Parsing the command line

procedure: (args:parse ARGS OPTIONS-LIST [OPTIONALS])

Parse ARGS, a list of command-line arguments given as strings, and return two values: an alist of option names (symbols) and their values, and a list of operands (non-option arguments).

Operands are returned in order, but options are returned in reverse order. Duplicate options are retained in the options alist, so this lets ASSQ find the last occurrence of any duplicate option on the command line. A (name . value) pair is added for each alias of every option found, so any alias is a valid lookup key.

OPTIONS-LIST is a list of accepted options, each created by args:make-option.

OPTIONALS is an optional sequence of keywords and values:

#:operand-proc PROC calls PROC for each operand, with arguments OPERAND OPTIONS OPERANDS
#:unrecognized-proc PROC calls PROC for each unrecognized option, with arguments OPTION NAME ARG OPTIONS OPERANDS

The default operand-proc is a no-op, and the default unrecognized-proc issues an error message and calls the help option's processor. See the args-fold documentation for usage information and an explanation of the procedure arguments; OPTIONS and OPERANDS are seed values.

parameter: args:help-options

List of option names (strings or single characters, as in SRFI 37) to be considered 'help' options, in order of preference. args:parse uses this to select a help option from the option list it is passed. This is currently used only for unrecognized options, for which the help option is automatically invoked.

By default, --help, -h and -? are considered help options.

Usage information

Well-behaved programs display help or usage text when invoked with an option such as --help. args:usage will generate a formatted list of options in the GNU style, from a list of args:options. Around this you might place a descriptive header and footer.

procedure: (args:usage OPTION-LIST)

Generate a formatted list of options from OPTION-LIST, and return a string suitable for embedding into help text. The single string consists of multiple lines, with a newline at the end of each line. Thus, a typical use would be (print (args:usage opts)).

parameter: args:width

We don't auto-format the left column (the option keys) based on the length of the longest option, but you can override it manually. Example:

(parameterize ((args:width 40)) (args:usage opts))

Operands and unrecognized options (advanced)

These are suitable for use with #:operand-proc or #:unrecognized-proc in args:parse. Most users will probably not customize these procedures themselves, but a couple useful prefabricated ones are provided.

procedure: args:ignore-unrecognized-options

Silently ignore unrecognized options, and omit from the options alist.

procedure: args:accept-unrecognized-options

Silently add unrecognized options to the options alist.

macro: (args:make-operand-proc [BODY])

Return a procedure suitable for using as an operand procedure in args:parse. Provides the arguments OPERAND, OPTIONS, and OPERANDS to the BODY; where OPERAND is the current operand (as in args-fold) and OPTIONS and OPERANDS are SEEDS (as in args-fold) and should not be modified. Also wraps BODY in code that adds the operand to the final operand list (seed).

Bugs

The name args:make-option is verbose.

Examples

(use args)

(define opts
 (list (args:make-option (c cookie)    #:none     "give me cookie"
         (print "cookie was tasty"))
       (args:make-option (d)           (optional: "LEVEL")  "debug level [default: 1]")
       (args:make-option (e elephant)  #:required "flatten the argument"
         (print "elephant: arg is " arg))
       (args:make-option (f file)      (required: "NAME")   "parse file NAME")
       (args:make-option (v V version) #:none     "Display version"
         (print "args-example $Revision: 1.1 $")
         (exit))
       (args:make-option (abc)         #:none     "Recite the alphabet")
       (args:make-option (h help)      #:none     "Display this text"
         (usage))))

(define (usage)
 (with-output-to-port (current-error-port)
   (lambda ()
     (print "Usage: " (car (argv)) " [options...] [files...]")
     (newline)
     (print (args:usage opts))
     (print "Report bugs to zbigniewsz at gmail.")))
 (exit 1))

(receive (options operands)
    (args:parse (command-line-arguments) opts)
  (print "-e -> " (alist-ref 'elephant options))) ;; 'e or 'elephant both work

;; If command line is --cookie -e test -e hello:
;;  cookie was tasty
;;  elephant: arg is test
;;  elephant: arg is hello
;;  -e -> hello

;; If command line is --cookie -e test --foo:
#|
cookie was tasty
elephant: arg is test
./args-example: unrecognized option: foo
Usage: ./args-example [options...] [files...]

 -c, --cookie             give me cookie
 -d [LEVEL]               debug level [default: 1]
 -e, --elephant=ARG       flatten the argument
 -f, --file=NAME          parse file NAME
 -v, -V, --version        Display version
     --abc                Recite the alphabet
 -h, --help               Display this text

Report bugs to zbigniewsz at gmail.
|#

Additional examples can be found in args-examples.scm.

License

Copyright (c) 2005, J. Ursetto.  All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
  this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in
  binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of
  conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or
  other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of the
  author nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or
  promote products derived from this software without specific prior
  written permission.

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