Commit graph

18 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ed Page
623ccbc152 style: Make clippy happy 2022-11-24 08:05:21 -06:00
Ed Page
c90a4eabae fix(help): Make output more dense
In looking at other help output, I noticed that they use two spaces, in
place of clap's 4, and it doesn't suffer from legibility.  If it
doesn't make the output worse, let's go ahead and make it as dense so we
fit more content on the screen.

This is a part of #4132
2022-09-07 17:13:55 -05:00
Ed Page
9a645d2d19 fix(help): Collapse usage to one line
After looking at more examples, I've become more attached to this
briefer format.

Part of #4132
2022-09-07 11:03:57 -05:00
Ed Page
65b5b5f7bf fix(help): Remove name/version/author from help
This is to help shorten it and polish it by removing redundant
information.

This is a part of #4132
2022-08-31 15:06:15 -05:00
Ed Page
42c943844c fix(help): Use Command in place of Subcommand
In switching to title case for help headings (#4123), it caused me to
look at "subcommand" in a fresh light.  I can't quite put my finger on
it but "Subcommand" looks a bit sloppy.  I also have recently been
surveying other CLIs and they just use "command" as well.

All of them are commands anyways, just some are children of others
(subcommands) while others are not (root or top-level commands, or just
command).  Context is good enough for clarifying subcommands from root
commands.

This is part of #4132
2022-08-31 08:53:10 -05:00
Ed Page
83d6add9aa fix(help): Shift focus to subcommands, when present
In surveying various tools and CLI parsers, I noticed they list the
subcommands first.  This puts an emphasis on them which makes sense
because that is most likely what an end user is supposed to pass in
next.

Listing them last aligns with the usage order but it probably doesn't
outweigh the value of getting a user moving forward.
2022-08-26 10:59:40 -05:00
Ed Page
9b23a09f7a fix(help): Don't rely on ALL CAPS for headers
I see them fulfilling two roles
- A form of bolding
- As a callback to their placeholder in usage

However, it is a bit of an unpolished look and no other CLI seems to do
it.  This looks a bit more proefessional.  We have colored help for
formatting and I think the sections relation to usage will be clear
enough.
2022-08-26 10:21:18 -05:00
Ed Page
f70ebe89a7 fix!: Require explicit help/version disabling
Before we introduced actions, it required specific setups to engage with
claps version and help printing.  With actions making that more
explicit, we don't get as much benefit from our multiple, obscure, ways
of users customizing help

Before
- Modify existing help or version with `mut_arg` which would
  automatically be pushed down the command tree like `global(true)`
- Create an new help or version and have it treated as if it was the
  built-in on (I think)
- Use the same flags as built-in and have the built-in flags
  automatically disabled
- Users could explicitly disable the built-in functionality and do what
  they want

Now
- `mut_arg` no longer works as we define help and version flags at the
  end
- If someone defines a flag that overlaps with the built-ins by id,
  long, or short, a debug assert will tell them to explicitly disable
  the built-in
- Any customization has to be done by a user providing their own.  To
  propagate through the command tree, they need to set `global(true)`.

Benefits
- Hopefully, this makes it less confusing on how to override help
  behavior.  Someone creates an arg and we then tell them how to disable
  the built-in
- This greatly simplifies the arg handling by pushing more
  responsibility onto the developer in what are hopefully just corner
  cases
- This removes about 1Kb from .text

Fixes #3405
Fixes #4033
2022-08-10 20:33:21 -05:00
Ed Page
5f20fe1930 docs: Shift focus from takes_value to actions 2022-07-26 14:50:51 -05:00
Ed Page
11076a5c70 fix(help)!: Make DeriveDisplayOrder the default, removing it
Force sorting with `next_display_order(None)`

Fixes #2808
2022-07-22 15:52:03 -05:00
Ed Page
389ff4ff21 fix(help): Subcommand display order respects Command::next_display_order
Previous behavior:
- They'd be sorted by default
- They'd derive display order if `DeriveDisplayOrder` was set
  - This could be set recursively
- The initial display order value for subcommands was 0

New behavior:
- Sorted order is derived by default
- Sorting is turned on by `cmd.next_display_order(None)`
  - This is not recursive, it must be set on each level
- The display order incrementing is mixed with arguments
  - This does make it slightly more difficult to predict
2022-07-22 15:03:16 -05:00
Ed Page
4a9c4dee64 refactor(test): Make it easier to fork tests 2022-06-07 16:21:12 -05:00
Ed Page
7cdce9cabe refactor(test): Use snapbox's diffs 2022-04-29 15:32:25 -05:00
Ed Page
e8010e79a9 refactor: Update app variables to cmd 2022-02-14 15:55:56 -06:00
Ed Page
c4144d7d6c docs: Update App references to Command 2022-02-14 15:33:49 -06:00
Ed Page
6ad52f41b3 feat: Allow disabling derive display order
In clap 4.0, we will make `DeriveDisplayOrder` the default and this is
how you'll disable it.

This is part of #2808
2022-02-07 19:19:11 -06:00
Ed Page
5290f82133 feat: Override DeriveDisplayOrder behavior with App::next_display_order
For the derive API, you can only call `next_display_order` when dealing
with a flatten.  Until we offer app attributes on arguments, the user can workaround with
this no-op flattens.

This is a part of #1807
2022-02-07 19:19:11 -06:00
Ed Page
045bf99ae0 test: Consolidate builder tests
This is prep for moving the derive tests.  Besides organizing the test
folder for each API, this should reduce link time at the cost of
re-compiling more when a test changes.
2021-11-30 10:07:05 -06:00
Renamed from tests/derive_order.rs (Browse further)