add a test case with single-level subcommands

This commit is contained in:
Alex Flint 2024-04-02 12:10:52 -04:00
parent 3ddfffdcd3
commit 8a917260c3
1 changed files with 44 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -448,6 +448,50 @@ Options:
assert.Equal(t, expectedUsage, usage.String())
}
func TestUsageWithSubcommands(t *testing.T) {
expectedUsage := "Usage: example child [--values VALUES]"
expectedHelp := `
Usage: example child [--values VALUES]
Options:
--values VALUES Values
Global options:
--verbose, -v verbosity level
--help, -h display this help and exit
`
var args struct {
Verbose bool `arg:"-v" help:"verbosity level"`
Child *struct {
Values []float64 `help:"Values"`
} `arg:"subcommand:child"`
}
os.Args[0] = "example"
p, err := NewParser(Config{}, &args)
require.NoError(t, err)
_ = p.Parse([]string{"child"})
var help bytes.Buffer
p.WriteHelp(&help)
assert.Equal(t, expectedHelp[1:], help.String())
var help2 bytes.Buffer
p.WriteHelpForSubcommand(&help2, "child")
assert.Equal(t, expectedHelp[1:], help2.String())
var usage bytes.Buffer
p.WriteUsage(&usage)
assert.Equal(t, expectedUsage, strings.TrimSpace(usage.String()))
var usage2 bytes.Buffer
p.WriteUsageForSubcommand(&usage2, "child")
assert.Equal(t, expectedUsage, strings.TrimSpace(usage2.String()))
}
func TestUsageWithNestedSubcommands(t *testing.T) {
expectedUsage := "Usage: example child nested [--enable] OUTPUT"