class GetoptLong
Class GetoptLong provides parsing both for options and for regular arguments.
Using GetoptLong, you can define options for your program. The program can then capture and respond to whatever options are included in the command that executes the program.
A simple example: file simple.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--number', '-n', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--verbose', '-v', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--help', '-h', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] )
If you are somewhat familiar with options, you may want to skip to this full example.
Options¶ ↑
A GetoptLong option has:
-
A string option name.
-
Zero or more string aliases for the name.
-
An option type.
Options may be defined by calling singleton method GetoptLong.new
, which returns a new GetoptLong object. Options may then be processed by calling other methods such as GetoptLong#each
.
Option Name and Aliases¶ ↑
In the array that defines an option, the first element is the string option name. Often the name takes the ‘long’ form, beginning with two hyphens.
The option name may have any number of aliases, which are defined by additional string elements.
The name and each alias must be of one of two forms:
-
Two hyphens, followed by one or more letters.
-
One hyphen, followed by a single letter.
File aliases.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', '-x', '--aaa', '-a', '-p', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end
An option may be cited by its name, or by any of its aliases; the parsed option always reports the name, not an alias:
$ ruby aliases.rb -a -p --xxx --aaa -x
Output:
["--xxx", ""] ["--xxx", ""] ["--xxx", ""] ["--xxx", ""] ["--xxx", ""]
An option may also be cited by an abbreviation of its name or any alias, as long as that abbreviation is unique among the options.
File abbrev.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT], ['--xyz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end
Command line:
$ ruby abbrev.rb --xxx --xx --xyz --xy
Output:
["--xxx", ""] ["--xxx", ""] ["--xyz", ""] ["--xyz", ""]
This command line raises GetoptLong::AmbiguousOption
:
$ ruby abbrev.rb --x
Repetition¶ ↑
An option may be cited more than once:
$ ruby abbrev.rb --xxx --xyz --xxx --xyz
Output:
["--xxx", ""] ["--xyz", ""] ["--xxx", ""] ["--xyz", ""]
Treating Remaining Options as Arguments¶ ↑
A option-like token that appears anywhere after the token --
is treated as an ordinary argument, and is not processed as an option:
$ ruby abbrev.rb --xxx --xyz -- --xxx --xyz
Output:
["--xxx", ""] ["--xyz", ""]
Option Types¶ ↑
Each option definition includes an option type, which controls whether the option takes an argument.
File types.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end
Note that an option type has to do with the option argument (whether it is required, optional, or forbidden), not with whether the option itself is required.
Option with Required Argument¶ ↑
An option of type GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT
must be followed by an argument, which is associated with that option:
$ ruby types.rb --xxx foo
Output:
["--xxx", "foo"]
If the option is not last, its argument is whatever follows it (even if the argument looks like another option):
$ ruby types.rb --xxx --yyy
Output:
["--xxx", "--yyy"]
If the option is last, an exception is raised:
$ ruby types.rb # Raises GetoptLong::MissingArgument
Option with Optional Argument¶ ↑
An option of type GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT
may be followed by an argument, which if given is associated with that option.
If the option is last, it does not have an argument:
$ ruby types.rb --yyy
Output:
["--yyy", ""]
If the option is followed by another option, it does not have an argument:
$ ruby types.rb --yyy --zzz
Output:
["--yyy", ""] ["--zzz", ""]
Otherwise the option is followed by its argument, which is associated with that option:
$ ruby types.rb --yyy foo
Output:
["--yyy", "foo"]
Option with No Argument¶ ↑
An option of type GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT
takes no argument:
ruby types.rb --zzz foo
Output:
["--zzz", ""]
ARGV¶ ↑
You can process options either with method each
and a block, or with method get
.
During processing, each found option is removed, along with its argument if there is one. After processing, each remaining element was neither an option nor the argument for an option.
File argv.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) puts "Original ARGV: #{ARGV}" options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end puts "Remaining ARGV: #{ARGV}"
Command line:
$ ruby argv.rb --xxx Foo --yyy Bar Baz --zzz Bat Bam
Output:
Original ARGV: ["--xxx", "Foo", "--yyy", "Bar", "Baz", "--zzz", "Bat", "Bam"] ["--xxx", "Foo"] ["--yyy", "Bar"] ["--zzz", ""] Remaining ARGV: ["Baz", "Bat", "Bam"]
Ordering¶ ↑
There are three settings that control the way the options are interpreted:
-
PERMUTE
. -
REQUIRE_ORDER
. -
RETURN_IN_ORDER
.
The initial setting for a new GetoptLong object is REQUIRE_ORDER
if environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT
is defined, PERMUTE
otherwise.
PERMUTE Ordering¶ ↑
In the PERMUTE
ordering, options and other, non-option, arguments may appear in any order and any mixture.
File permute.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) puts "Original ARGV: #{ARGV}" options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end puts "Remaining ARGV: #{ARGV}"
Command line:
$ ruby permute.rb Foo --zzz Bar --xxx Baz --yyy Bat Bam --xxx Bag Bah
Output:
Original ARGV: ["Foo", "--zzz", "Bar", "--xxx", "Baz", "--yyy", "Bat", "Bam", "--xxx", "Bag", "Bah"] ["--zzz", ""] ["--xxx", "Baz"] ["--yyy", "Bat"] ["--xxx", "Bag"] Remaining ARGV: ["Foo", "Bar", "Bam", "Bah"]
REQUIRE_ORDER Ordering¶ ↑
In the REQUIRE_ORDER
ordering, all options precede all non-options; that is, each word after the first non-option word is treated as a non-option word (even if it begins with a hyphen).
File require_order.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) options.ordering = GetoptLong::REQUIRE_ORDER puts "Original ARGV: #{ARGV}" options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end puts "Remaining ARGV: #{ARGV}"
Command line:
$ ruby require_order.rb --xxx Foo Bar --xxx Baz --yyy Bat -zzz
Output:
Original ARGV: ["--xxx", "Foo", "Bar", "--xxx", "Baz", "--yyy", "Bat", "-zzz"] ["--xxx", "Foo"] Remaining ARGV: ["Bar", "--xxx", "Baz", "--yyy", "Bat", "-zzz"]
RETURN_IN_ORDER Ordering¶ ↑
In the RETURN_IN_ORDER
ordering, every word is treated as an option. A word that begins with a hyphen (or two) is treated in the usual way; a word word
that does not so begin is treated as an option whose name is an empty string, and whose value is word
.
File return_in_order.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) options.ordering = GetoptLong::RETURN_IN_ORDER puts "Original ARGV: #{ARGV}" options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end puts "Remaining ARGV: #{ARGV}"
Command line:
$ ruby return_in_order.rb Foo --xxx Bar Baz --zzz Bat Bam
Output:
Original ARGV: ["Foo", "--xxx", "Bar", "Baz", "--zzz", "Bat", "Bam"] ["", "Foo"] ["--xxx", "Bar"] ["", "Baz"] ["--zzz", ""] ["", "Bat"] ["", "Bam"] Remaining ARGV: []
Full Example¶ ↑
File fibonacci.rb
:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--number', '-n', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--verbose', '-v', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--help', '-h', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) def help(status = 0) puts <<~HELP Usage: -n n, --number n: Compute Fibonacci number for n. -v [boolean], --verbose [boolean]: Show intermediate results; default is 'false'. -h, --help: Show this help. HELP exit(status) end def print_fibonacci (number) return 0 if number == 0 return 1 if number == 1 or number == 2 i = 0 j = 1 (2..number).each do k = i + j i = j j = k puts j if @verbose end puts j unless @verbose end options.each do |option, argument| case option when '--number' @number = argument.to_i when '--verbose' @verbose = if argument.empty? true elsif argument.match(/true/i) true elsif argument.match(/false/i) false else puts '--verbose argument must be true or false' help(255) end when '--help' help end end unless @number puts 'Option --number is required.' help(255) end print_fibonacci(@number)
Command line:
$ ruby fibonacci.rb
Output:
Option --number is required. Usage: -n n, --number n: Compute Fibonacci number for n. -v [boolean], --verbose [boolean]: Show intermediate results; default is 'false'. -h, --help: Show this help.
Command line:
$ ruby fibonacci.rb --number
Raises GetoptLong::MissingArgument
:
fibonacci.rb: option `--number' requires an argument
Command line:
$ ruby fibonacci.rb --number 6
Output:
8
Command line:
$ ruby fibonacci.rb --number 6 --verbose
Output:
1 2 3 5 8
Command line:
$ ruby fibonacci.rb --number 6 --verbose yes
Output:
--verbose argument must be true or false Usage: -n n, --number n: Compute Fibonacci number for n. -v [boolean], --verbose [boolean]: Show intermediate results; default is 'false'. -h, --help: Show this help.
Constants
- ARGUMENT_FLAGS
Argument flags.
- ORDERINGS
Orderings.
- STATUS_TERMINATED
- VERSION
Version.
Attributes
Returns whether option processing has failed.
Returns whether option processing has failed.
Returns the ordering setting.
Sets quiet mode and returns the given argument:
-
When
false
ornil
, error messages are written to$stdout
. -
Otherwise, error messages are not written.
Sets quiet mode and returns the given argument:
-
When
false
ornil
, error messages are written to$stdout
. -
Otherwise, error messages are not written.
Public Class Methods
Returns a new GetoptLong object based on the given arguments
. See Options.
Example:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--number', '-n', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--verbose', '-v', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--help', '-h', GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] )
Raises an exception if:
-
Any of
arguments
is not an array. -
Any option name or alias is not a string.
-
Any option type is invalid.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 412 def initialize(*arguments) # # Current ordering. # if ENV.include?('POSIXLY_CORRECT') @ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER else @ordering = PERMUTE end # # Hash table of option names. # Keys of the table are option names, and their values are canonical # names of the options. # @canonical_names = Hash.new # # Hash table of argument flags. # Keys of the table are option names, and their values are argument # flags of the options. # @argument_flags = Hash.new # # Whether error messages are output to $stderr. # @quiet = false # # Status code. # @status = STATUS_YET # # Error code. # @error = nil # # Error message. # @error_message = nil # # Rest of catenated short options. # @rest_singles = '' # # List of non-option-arguments. # Append them to ARGV when option processing is terminated. # @non_option_arguments = Array.new if 0 < arguments.length set_options(*arguments) end end
Public Instance Methods
Calls the given block with each option; each option is a 2-element array containing:
-
The option name (the name itself, not an alias).
-
The option value.
Example:
require 'getoptlong' options = GetoptLong.new( ['--xxx', '-x', GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT], ['--yyy', '-y', GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT], ['--zzz', '-z',GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT] ) puts "Original ARGV: #{ARGV}" options.each do |option, argument| p [option, argument] end puts "Remaining ARGV: #{ARGV}"
Command line:
ruby each.rb -xxx Foo -x Bar --yyy Baz -y Bat --zzz
Output:
Original ARGV: ["-xxx", "Foo", "-x", "Bar", "--yyy", "Baz", "-y", "Bat", "--zzz"] ["--xxx", "xx"] ["--xxx", "Bar"] ["--yyy", "Baz"] ["--yyy", "Bat"] ["--zzz", ""] Remaining ARGV: ["Foo"]
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 859 def each loop do option_name, option_argument = get_option break if option_name == nil yield option_name, option_argument end end
Return the appropriate error message in POSIX-defined format. If no error has occurred, returns nil
.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 662 def error_message return @error_message end
Returns the next option as a 2-element array containing:
-
The option name (the name itself, not an alias).
-
The option value.
Returns nil
if there are no more options.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 674 def get option_name, option_argument = nil, '' # # Check status. # return nil if @error != nil case @status when STATUS_YET @status = STATUS_STARTED when STATUS_TERMINATED return nil end # # Get next option argument. # if 0 < @rest_singles.length argument = '-' + @rest_singles elsif (ARGV.length == 0) terminate return nil elsif @ordering == PERMUTE while 0 < ARGV.length && ARGV[0] !~ /\A-./ @non_option_arguments.push(ARGV.shift) end if ARGV.length == 0 terminate return nil end argument = ARGV.shift elsif @ordering == REQUIRE_ORDER if (ARGV[0] !~ /\A-./) terminate return nil end argument = ARGV.shift else argument = ARGV.shift end # # Check the special argument `--'. # `--' indicates the end of the option list. # if argument == '--' && @rest_singles.length == 0 terminate return nil end # # Check for long and short options. # if argument =~ /\A(--[^=]+)/ && @rest_singles.length == 0 # # This is a long style option, which start with `--'. # pattern = $1 if @canonical_names.include?(pattern) option_name = pattern else # # The option `option_name' is not registered in `@canonical_names'. # It may be an abbreviated. # matches = [] @canonical_names.each_key do |key| if key.index(pattern) == 0 option_name = key matches << key end end if 2 <= matches.length set_error(AmbiguousOption, "option `#{argument}' is ambiguous between #{matches.join(', ')}") elsif matches.length == 0 set_error(InvalidOption, "unrecognized option `#{argument}'") end end # # Check an argument to the option. # if @argument_flags[option_name] == REQUIRED_ARGUMENT if argument =~ /=(.*)/m option_argument = $1 elsif 0 < ARGV.length option_argument = ARGV.shift else set_error(MissingArgument, "option `#{argument}' requires an argument") end elsif @argument_flags[option_name] == OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT if argument =~ /=(.*)/m option_argument = $1 elsif 0 < ARGV.length && ARGV[0] !~ /\A-./ option_argument = ARGV.shift else option_argument = '' end elsif argument =~ /=(.*)/m set_error(NeedlessArgument, "option `#{option_name}' doesn't allow an argument") end elsif argument =~ /\A(-(.))(.*)/m # # This is a short style option, which start with `-' (not `--'). # Short options may be catenated (e.g. `-l -g' is equivalent to # `-lg'). # option_name, ch, @rest_singles = $1, $2, $3 if @canonical_names.include?(option_name) # # The option `option_name' is found in `@canonical_names'. # Check its argument. # if @argument_flags[option_name] == REQUIRED_ARGUMENT if 0 < @rest_singles.length option_argument = @rest_singles @rest_singles = '' elsif 0 < ARGV.length option_argument = ARGV.shift else # 1003.2 specifies the format of this message. set_error(MissingArgument, "option requires an argument -- #{ch}") end elsif @argument_flags[option_name] == OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT if 0 < @rest_singles.length option_argument = @rest_singles @rest_singles = '' elsif 0 < ARGV.length && ARGV[0] !~ /\A-./ option_argument = ARGV.shift else option_argument = '' end end else # # This is an invalid option. # 1003.2 specifies the format of this message. # if ENV.include?('POSIXLY_CORRECT') set_error(InvalidOption, "invalid option -- #{ch}") else set_error(InvalidOption, "invalid option -- #{ch}") end end else # # This is a non-option argument. # Only RETURN_IN_ORDER fell into here. # return '', argument end return @canonical_names[option_name], option_argument end
Sets the ordering; see Ordering; returns the new ordering.
If the given ordering
is PERMUTE
and environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT
is defined, sets the ordering to REQUIRE_ORDER
; otherwise sets the ordering to ordering
:
options = GetoptLong.new options.ordering == GetoptLong::PERMUTE # => true options.ordering = GetoptLong::RETURN_IN_ORDER options.ordering == GetoptLong::RETURN_IN_ORDER # => true ENV['POSIXLY_CORRECT'] = 'true' options.ordering = GetoptLong::PERMUTE options.ordering == GetoptLong::REQUIRE_ORDER # => true
Raises an exception if ordering
is invalid.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 489 def ordering=(ordering) # # The method is failed if option processing has already started. # if @status != STATUS_YET set_error(ArgumentError, "argument error") raise RuntimeError, "invoke ordering=, but option processing has already started" end # # Check ordering. # if !ORDERINGS.include?(ordering) raise ArgumentError, "invalid ordering `#{ordering}'" end if ordering == PERMUTE && ENV.include?('POSIXLY_CORRECT') @ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER else @ordering = ordering end end
Replaces existing options with those given by arguments
, which have the same form as the arguments to ::new
; returns self
.
Raises an exception if option processing has begun.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 524 def set_options(*arguments) # # The method is failed if option processing has already started. # if @status != STATUS_YET raise RuntimeError, "invoke set_options, but option processing has already started" end # # Clear tables of option names and argument flags. # @canonical_names.clear @argument_flags.clear arguments.each do |arg| if !arg.is_a?(Array) raise ArgumentError, "the option list contains non-Array argument" end # # Find an argument flag and it set to `argument_flag'. # argument_flag = nil arg.each do |i| if ARGUMENT_FLAGS.include?(i) if argument_flag != nil raise ArgumentError, "too many argument-flags" end argument_flag = i end end raise ArgumentError, "no argument-flag" if argument_flag == nil canonical_name = nil arg.each do |i| # # Check an option name. # next if i == argument_flag begin if !i.is_a?(String) || i !~ /\A-([^-]|-.+)\z/ raise ArgumentError, "an invalid option `#{i}'" end if (@canonical_names.include?(i)) raise ArgumentError, "option redefined `#{i}'" end rescue @canonical_names.clear @argument_flags.clear raise end # # Register the option (`i') to the `@canonical_names' and # `@canonical_names' Hashes. # if canonical_name == nil canonical_name = i end @canonical_names[i] = canonical_name @argument_flags[i] = argument_flag end raise ArgumentError, "no option name" if canonical_name == nil end return self end
Terminate option processing; returns nil
if processing has already terminated; otherwise returns self
.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 612 def terminate return nil if @status == STATUS_TERMINATED raise RuntimeError, "an error has occurred" if @error != nil @status = STATUS_TERMINATED @non_option_arguments.reverse_each do |argument| ARGV.unshift(argument) end @canonical_names = nil @argument_flags = nil @rest_singles = nil @non_option_arguments = nil return self end
Returns true
if option processing has terminated, false
otherwise.
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 632 def terminated? return @status == STATUS_TERMINATED end
Protected Instance Methods
Set an error (a protected method).
# File getoptlong-0.2.1/lib/getoptlong.rb, line 639 def set_error(type, message) $stderr.print("#{$0}: #{message}\n") if !@quiet @error = type @error_message = message @canonical_names = nil @argument_flags = nil @rest_singles = nil @non_option_arguments = nil raise type, message end