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README.md
1If you want to write an option parser, and have it be good, there are 2two ways to do it. The Right Way, and the Wrong Way. 3 4The Wrong Way is to sit down and write an option parser. We've all done 5that. 6 7The Right Way is to write some complex configurable program with so many 8options that you hit the limit of your frustration just trying to 9manage them all, and defer it with duct-tape solutions until you see 10exactly to the core of the problem, and finally snap and write an 11awesome option parser. 12 13If you want to write an option parser, don't write an option parser. 14Write a package manager, or a source control system, or a service 15restarter, or an operating system. You probably won't end up with a 16good one of those, but if you don't give up, and you are relentless and 17diligent enough in your procrastination, you may just end up with a very 18nice option parser. 19 20## USAGE 21 22```javascript 23// my-program.js 24var nopt = require("nopt") 25 , Stream = require("stream").Stream 26 , path = require("path") 27 , knownOpts = { "foo" : [String, null] 28 , "bar" : [Stream, Number] 29 , "baz" : path 30 , "bloo" : [ "big", "medium", "small" ] 31 , "flag" : Boolean 32 , "pick" : Boolean 33 , "many1" : [String, Array] 34 , "many2" : [path, Array] 35 } 36 , shortHands = { "foofoo" : ["--foo", "Mr. Foo"] 37 , "b7" : ["--bar", "7"] 38 , "m" : ["--bloo", "medium"] 39 , "p" : ["--pick"] 40 , "f" : ["--flag"] 41 } 42 // everything is optional. 43 // knownOpts and shorthands default to {} 44 // arg list defaults to process.argv 45 // slice defaults to 2 46 , parsed = nopt(knownOpts, shortHands, process.argv, 2) 47console.log(parsed) 48``` 49 50This would give you support for any of the following: 51 52```console 53$ node my-program.js --foo "blerp" --no-flag 54{ "foo" : "blerp", "flag" : false } 55 56$ node my-program.js ---bar 7 --foo "Mr. Hand" --flag 57{ bar: 7, foo: "Mr. Hand", flag: true } 58 59$ node my-program.js --foo "blerp" -f -----p 60{ foo: "blerp", flag: true, pick: true } 61 62$ node my-program.js -fp --foofoo 63{ foo: "Mr. Foo", flag: true, pick: true } 64 65$ node my-program.js --foofoo -- -fp # -- stops the flag parsing. 66{ foo: "Mr. Foo", argv: { remain: ["-fp"] } } 67 68$ node my-program.js --blatzk -fp # unknown opts are ok. 69{ blatzk: true, flag: true, pick: true } 70 71$ node my-program.js --blatzk=1000 -fp # but you need to use = if they have a value 72{ blatzk: 1000, flag: true, pick: true } 73 74$ node my-program.js --no-blatzk -fp # unless they start with "no-" 75{ blatzk: false, flag: true, pick: true } 76 77$ node my-program.js --baz b/a/z # known paths are resolved. 78{ baz: "/Users/isaacs/b/a/z" } 79 80# if Array is one of the types, then it can take many 81# values, and will always be an array. The other types provided 82# specify what types are allowed in the list. 83 84$ node my-program.js --many1 5 --many1 null --many1 foo 85{ many1: ["5", "null", "foo"] } 86 87$ node my-program.js --many2 foo --many2 bar 88{ many2: ["/path/to/foo", "path/to/bar"] } 89``` 90 91Read the tests at the bottom of `lib/nopt.js` for more examples of 92what this puppy can do. 93 94## Types 95 96The following types are supported, and defined on `nopt.typeDefs` 97 98* String: A normal string. No parsing is done. 99* path: A file system path. Gets resolved against cwd if not absolute. 100* url: A url. If it doesn't parse, it isn't accepted. 101* Number: Must be numeric. 102* Date: Must parse as a date. If it does, and `Date` is one of the options, 103 then it will return a Date object, not a string. 104* Boolean: Must be either `true` or `false`. If an option is a boolean, 105 then it does not need a value, and its presence will imply `true` as 106 the value. To negate boolean flags, do `--no-whatever` or `--whatever 107 false` 108* NaN: Means that the option is strictly not allowed. Any value will 109 fail. 110* Stream: An object matching the "Stream" class in node. Valuable 111 for use when validating programmatically. (npm uses this to let you 112 supply any WriteStream on the `outfd` and `logfd` config options.) 113* Array: If `Array` is specified as one of the types, then the value 114 will be parsed as a list of options. This means that multiple values 115 can be specified, and that the value will always be an array. 116 117If a type is an array of values not on this list, then those are 118considered valid values. For instance, in the example above, the 119`--bloo` option can only be one of `"big"`, `"medium"`, or `"small"`, 120and any other value will be rejected. 121 122When parsing unknown fields, `"true"`, `"false"`, and `"null"` will be 123interpreted as their JavaScript equivalents. 124 125You can also mix types and values, or multiple types, in a list. For 126instance `{ blah: [Number, null] }` would allow a value to be set to 127either a Number or null. When types are ordered, this implies a 128preference, and the first type that can be used to properly interpret 129the value will be used. 130 131To define a new type, add it to `nopt.typeDefs`. Each item in that 132hash is an object with a `type` member and a `validate` method. The 133`type` member is an object that matches what goes in the type list. The 134`validate` method is a function that gets called with `validate(data, 135key, val)`. Validate methods should assign `data[key]` to the valid 136value of `val` if it can be handled properly, or return boolean 137`false` if it cannot. 138 139You can also call `nopt.clean(data, types, typeDefs)` to clean up a 140config object and remove its invalid properties. 141 142## Error Handling 143 144By default, nopt outputs a warning to standard error when invalid values for 145known options are found. You can change this behavior by assigning a method 146to `nopt.invalidHandler`. This method will be called with 147the offending `nopt.invalidHandler(key, val, types)`. 148 149If no `nopt.invalidHandler` is assigned, then it will console.error 150its whining. If it is assigned to boolean `false` then the warning is 151suppressed. 152 153## Abbreviations 154 155Yes, they are supported. If you define options like this: 156 157```javascript 158{ "foolhardyelephants" : Boolean 159, "pileofmonkeys" : Boolean } 160``` 161 162Then this will work: 163 164```bash 165node program.js --foolhar --pil 166node program.js --no-f --pileofmon 167# etc. 168``` 169 170## Shorthands 171 172Shorthands are a hash of shorter option names to a snippet of args that 173they expand to. 174 175If multiple one-character shorthands are all combined, and the 176combination does not unambiguously match any other option or shorthand, 177then they will be broken up into their constituent parts. For example: 178 179```json 180{ "s" : ["--loglevel", "silent"] 181, "g" : "--global" 182, "f" : "--force" 183, "p" : "--parseable" 184, "l" : "--long" 185} 186``` 187 188```bash 189npm ls -sgflp 190# just like doing this: 191npm ls --loglevel silent --global --force --long --parseable 192``` 193 194## The Rest of the args 195 196The config object returned by nopt is given a special member called 197`argv`, which is an object with the following fields: 198 199* `remain`: The remaining args after all the parsing has occurred. 200* `original`: The args as they originally appeared. 201* `cooked`: The args after flags and shorthands are expanded. 202 203## Slicing 204 205Node programs are called with more or less the exact argv as it appears 206in C land, after the v8 and node-specific options have been plucked off. 207As such, `argv[0]` is always `node` and `argv[1]` is always the 208JavaScript program being run. 209 210That's usually not very useful to you. So they're sliced off by 211default. If you want them, then you can pass in `0` as the last 212argument, or any other number that you'd like to slice off the start of 213the list. 214