libargparse =========== This is (yet another) simple command-line parser for C++ applications, inspired by Python's agparse module. It requires only a C++11 compiler, and has no external dependancies. One of the advantages of libargparse is that all conversions from command-line strings to program types (bool, int etc.) are performed when the command line is parsed (and not when the options are accessed). This avoids command-line related errors from showing up deep in the program execution, which can be problematic for long-running programs. Basic Usage =========== ```cpp #include "argparse.hpp" struct Args { argparse::ArgValue do_foo; argparse::ArgValue enable_bar; argparse::ArgValue filename; argparse::ArgValue verbosity; }; int main(int argc, const char** argv) { Args args; auto parser = argparse::ArgumentParser(argv[0], "My application description"); parser.add_argument(args.filename, "filename") .help("File to process"); parser.add_argument(args.do_foo, "--foo") .help("Causes foo") .default_value("false") .action(argparse::Action::STORE_TRUE); parser.add_argument(args.enable_bar, "--bar") .help("Control bar") .default_value("false"); parser.add_argument(args.verbosity, "--verbosity", "-v") .help("Sets the verbosity") .default_value("1") .choices({"0", "1", "2"}); parser.parse_args(argc, argv); //Show the arguments std::cout << "args.filename: " << args.filename << "\n"; std::cout << "args.do_foo: " << args.do_foo << "\n"; std::cout << "args.verbosity: " << args.verbosity << "\n"; std::cout << "\n"; //Do work if (args.do_foo) { if (args.verbosity > 0) { std::cout << "Doing foo with " << args.filename << "\n"; } if (args.verbosity > 1) { std::cout << "Doing foo step 1" << "\n"; std::cout << "Doing foo step 2" << "\n"; std::cout << "Doing foo step 3" << "\n"; } } if (args.enable_bar) { if (args.verbosity > 0) { std::cout << "Bar is enabled" << "\n"; } } else { if (args.verbosity > 0) { std::cout << "Bar is disabled" << "\n"; } } return 0; } ``` and the resulting help: ``` $ ./argparse_example -h usage: argparse_example filename [--foo] [--bar {true, false}] [-v {0, 1, 2}] [-h] My application description arguments: filename File to process --foo Causes foo (Default: false) --bar {true, false} Control whether bar is enabled (Default: false) -v {0, 1, 2}, --verbosity {0, 1, 2} Sets the verbosity (Default: 1) -h, --help Shows this help message ``` By default the usage and help messages are line-wrapped to 80 characters. Custom Conversions ================== By default libargparse performs string to program type conversions using ````, meaning any type supporting ``operator<<()`` and ``operator>>()`` should be automatically supported. However this does not always provide sufficient flexibility. As a result libargparse also supports custom conversions, allowing user-defined mappings between command-line strings to program types. If we wanted to modify the above example so the '--bar' argument accepted the strings 'on' and 'off' (instead of the default 'true' and 'false') we would define a custom class as follows: ```cpp struct OnOff { ConvertedValue from_str(std::string str) { ConvertedValue converted_value; if (str == "on") converted_value.set_value(true); else if (str == "off") converted_value.set_value(false); else converted_value.set_error("Invalid argument value"); return converted_value; } ConvertedValue to_str(bool val) { ConvertedValue converted_value; if (val) converted_value.set_value("on"); else converted_value.set_value("off"); return converted_value; } std::vector default_choices() { return {"on", "off"}; } }; ``` Where the `from_str()` and `to_str()` define the conversions to and from a string, and `default_choices()` returns the set of valid choices. Note that default_choices() can return an empty vector to indicate there is no specified default set of choices. We then modify the ``add_argument()`` call to use our conversion object: ```cpp parser.add_argument(args.enable_bar, "--bar") .help("Control whether bar is enabled") .default_value("off"); ``` with the resulting help: ``` usage: argparse_example filename [--foo] [--bar {on, off}] [-v {0, 1, 2}] [-h] My application description arguments: filename File to process --foo Causes foo (Default: false) --bar {on, off} Control whether bar is enabled (Default: off) -v {0, 1, 2}, --verbosity {0, 1, 2} Sets the verbosity (Default: 1) -h, --help Shows this help message ``` Advanced Usage ============== For more advanced usage such as argument groups see [argparse_test.cpp](argparse_test.cpp) and [argparse.hpp](src/argparse.hpp). Future Work =========== libargparse is missing a variety of more advanced features found in Python's argparse, including (but not limited to): * action: append, count * subcommands * mutually exclusive options * parsing only known args * concatenated short options (e.g. `-xvf`, for options `-x`, `-v`, `-f`) * equal concatenated option values (e.g. `--foo=VALUE`) Acknowledgements ================ Python's [argparse module](https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/argparse.html)