2fadb8a20e
`PathBuf` is in `std::path`, not `std::fs`. |
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examples | ||
src | ||
structopt-derive | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
COPYING | ||
README.md |
StructOpt
Parse command line argument by defining a struct. It combines clap with custom derive.
Documentation
Find it on Docs.rs. You can also check the examples and the changelog.
Example
Add structopt
to your dependencies of your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
structopt = "0.2"
And then, in your rust file:
#[macro_use]
extern crate structopt;
use std::path::PathBuf;
use structopt::StructOpt;
/// A basic example
#[derive(StructOpt, Debug)]
#[structopt(name = "basic")]
struct Opt {
// A flag, true if used in the command line. Note doc comment will
// be used for the help message of the flag.
/// Activate debug mode
#[structopt(short = "d", long = "debug")]
debug: bool,
// The number of occurences of the `v/verbose` flag
/// Verbose mode (-v, -vv, -vvv, etc.)
#[structopt(short = "v", long = "verbose", parse(from_occurrences))]
verbose: u8,
/// Set speed
#[structopt(short = "s", long = "speed", default_value = "42")]
speed: f64,
/// Output file
#[structopt(short = "o", long = "output", parse(from_os_str))]
output: PathBuf,
/// Number of cars
#[structopt(short = "c", long = "nb-cars")]
nb_cars: Option<i32>,
/// admin_level to consider
#[structopt(short = "l", long = "level")]
level: Vec<String>,
/// Files to process
#[structopt(name = "FILE", parse(from_os_str))]
files: Vec<PathBuf>,
}
fn main() {
let opt = Opt::from_args();
println!("{:?}", opt);
}
Using this example:
$ ./basic
error: The following required arguments were not provided:
--output <output>
USAGE:
basic --output <output> --speed <speed>
For more information try --help
$ ./basic --help
basic 0.2.0
Guillaume Pinot <texitoi@texitoi.eu>
A basic example
USAGE:
basic [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] --output <output> [--] [FILE]...
FLAGS:
-d, --debug Activate debug mode
-h, --help Prints help information
-V, --version Prints version information
-v, --verbose Verbose mode
OPTIONS:
-c, --car <car> Number of car
-l, --level <level>... admin_level to consider
-o, --output <output> Output file
-s, --speed <speed> Set speed [default: 42]
ARGS:
<FILE>... Files to process
$ ./basic -o foo.txt
Opt { debug: false, verbose: 0, speed: 42, output: "foo.txt", car: None, level: [], files: [] }
$ ./basic -o foo.txt -dvvvs 1337 -l alice -l bob --car 4 bar.txt baz.txt
Opt { debug: true, verbose: 3, speed: 1337, output: "foo.txt", car: Some(4), level: ["alice", "bob"], files: ["bar.txt", "baz.txt"] }
Why
I use docopt since a long time (pre rust 1.0). I really like the fact that you have a structure with the parsed argument: no need to convert String
to f64
, no useless unwrap
. But on the other hand, I don't like to write by hand the usage string. That's like going back to the golden age of WYSIWYG editors. Field naming is also a bit artificial.
Today, the new standard to read command line arguments in Rust is clap. This library is so feature full! But I think there is one downside: even if you can validate argument and expressing that an argument is required, you still need to transform something looking like a hashmap of string vectors to something useful for your application.
Now, there is stable custom derive. Thus I can add to clap the automatic conversion that I miss. Here is the result.