options: Powerful and easy command-line option parser

[ console, library, mit ] [ Propose Tags ]

Lets library and application developers easily work with command-line options.


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Versions [RSS] 0.1, 0.1.1, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.2.1, 1.2.1.1, 1.2.1.2
Change log changelog.md
Dependencies base (>=4.16 && <4.20), containers (>=0.6 && <0.7), monads-tf (>=0.3 && <0.4), options [details]
License MIT
Author John Millikin <john@john-millikin.com>
Maintainer Chris Martin <chris@typeclasses.com>
Revised Revision 1 made by Bodigrim at 2024-05-05T21:52:13Z
Category Console
Home page https://github.com/typeclasses/options/
Uploaded by chris_martin at 2023-07-11T21:02:36Z
Distributions Arch:1.2.1.1, Debian:1.2.1.1, LTSHaskell:1.2.1.2, NixOS:1.2.1.2, Stackage:1.2.1.2
Reverse Dependencies 10 direct, 27 indirect [details]
Downloads 12579 total (26 in the last 30 days)
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Status Docs available [build log]
Last success reported on 2023-07-11 [all 1 reports]

Readme for options-1.2.1.2

[back to package description]

The options package lets library and application developers easily work with command-line options.

This document discusses a handful of the utilities in this package. See the API documentation for the Options module for more.

Introductory example

The following example is a full program that can accept two options, --message and --quiet:

import Control.Applicative
import Options

data MainOptions = MainOptions
  { optMessage :: String
  , optQuiet :: Bool
  }
.
instance Options MainOptions where
  defineOptions = pure MainOptions
    <*> simpleOption "message" "Hello world!"
          "A message to show the user."
    <*> simpleOption "quiet" False
         "Whether to be quiet."

main :: IO ()
main = runCommand $ \opts args ->
  if optQuiet opts
      then return ()
      else putStrLn (optMessage opts)
$ ./hello
Hello world!
$ ./hello --message='ciao mondo'
ciao mondo
$ ./hello --quiet
$

In addition, this library will automatically create documentation options such as --help and --help-all:

$ ./hello --help
Help Options:
  -h, --help
    Show option summary.
  --help-all
    Show all help options.

Application Options:
  --message :: text
    A message to show the user.
    default: "Hello world!"
  --quiet :: bool
    Whether to be quiet.
    default: false

Defining options

optionType_bool

optionType_bool stores an option as a Bool. The option's value must be either "true" or "false".

Boolean options are unary, which means that their value is optional when specified on the command line. If a flag is present, the option is set to True.

$ ./app -q
$ ./app --quiet

Boolean options may still be specified explicitly by using long flags with the --flag=value format. This is the only way to set a unary flag to "false".

$ ./app --quiet=true
$ ./app --quiet=false

optionType_enum

optionType_enum store an option as one of a set of possible values. The type must be a bounded enumeration, and the type's Show instance will be used to implement the parser.

This is a simplistic implementation, useful for quick scripts. Users with more complex requirements for enum parsing are encouraged to define their own option types using optionType.

Example:

data Action = Hello | Goodbye
   deriving (Bounded, Enum, Show)

data MainOptions = MainOptions { optAction :: Action }

instance Options MainOptions where
  defineOptions = pure MainOptions
    <*> defineOption (optionType_enum "action") (\o -> o
          { optionLongFlags = ["action"]
          , optionDefault = Hello
          })

main = runCommand $ \opts args -> do
   putStrLn ("Running action " ++ show (optAction opts))
$ ./app
Running action Hello
$ ./app --action=Goodbye
Running action Goodbye

Parsing argument lists

parseOptions

parseOptions attempts to convert a list of command-line arguments into an options value. This can be used by application developers who want finer control over error handling, or who want to perform additional validation on the options value.

The argument list must be in the same encoding as the result of System.Environment.getArgs.

Use parsedOptions, parsedArguments, parsedError, and parsedHelp to inspect the result of parseOptions.

Example:

getOptionsOrDie :: Options a => IO a
getOptionsOrDie = do
  argv <- System.Environment.getArgs
  let parsed = parseOptions argv
  case parsedOptions parsed of
    Just opts -> return opts
    Nothing -> case parsedError parsed of
      Just err -> do
        hPutStrLn stderr (parsedHelp parsed)
        hPutStrLn stderr err
        exitFailure
      Nothing -> do
        hPutStr stdout (parsedHelp parsed)
        exitSuccess

parseSubcommand

parseSubcommand attempts to convert a list of command-line arguments into a subcommand action. This can be used by application developers who want finer control over error handling, or who want subcommands that run in an unusual monad.

The argument list must be in the same encoding as the result of System.Environment.getArgs.

Use parsedSubcommand, parsedError, and parsedHelp to inspect the result of parseSubcommand.

Example:

runSubcommand :: Options cmdOpts => [Subcommand cmdOpts (IO a)] -> IO a
runSubcommand subcommands = do
  argv <- System.Environment.getArgs
  let parsed = parseSubcommand subcommands argv
  case parsedSubcommand parsed of
    Just cmd -> cmd
    Nothing -> case parsedError parsed of
      Just err -> do
        hPutStrLn stderr (parsedHelp parsed)
        hPutStrLn stderr err
        exitFailure
      Nothing -> do
        hPutStr stdout (parsedHelp parsed)
        exitSuccess

Running main with options

runCommand

runCommand retrieves System.Environment.getArgs and attempts to parse it into a valid value of an Options type plus a list of left-over arguments.

The options and arguments are then passed to the provided computation.

If parsing fails, this computation will print an error and call exitFailure.

If parsing succeeds, and the user has passed a --help flag, and the developer is using the default help flag definitions, then this computation will print documentation and call exitSuccess.

runSubcommand

runSubcommand is used to run applications that are split into subcommands. Use subcommand to define available commands and their actions, then pass them to this computation to select one and run it.

If the user specifies an invalid subcommand, this computation will print an error and call exitFailure. In handling of invalid flags or --help, runSubcommand acts like runCommand.

Example:

import Control.Applicative
import Control.Monad (unless)
import Options

data MainOptions = MainOptions { optQuiet :: Bool }
instance Options MainOptions where
  defineOptions = pure MainOptions
    <*> simpleOption "quiet" False "Whether to be quiet."

data HelloOpts = HelloOpts { optHello :: String }
instance Options HelloOpts where
  defineOptions = pure HelloOpts
    <*> simpleOption "hello" "Hello!" "How to say hello."

data ByeOpts = ByeOpts { optName :: String }
instance Options ByeOpts where
  defineOptions = pure ByeOpts
    <*> simpleOption "name" "" "The user's name."

hello :: MainOptions -> HelloOpts -> [String] -> IO ()
hello mainOpts opts args = unless (optQuiet mainOpts) $ do
   putStrLn (optHello opts)

bye :: MainOptions -> ByeOpts -> [String] -> IO ()
bye mainOpts opts args = unless (optQuiet mainOpts) $ do
   putStrLn ("Good bye " ++ optName opts)

main :: IO ()
main = runSubcommand
  [ subcommand "hello" hello
  , subcommand "bye" bye
  ]
$ ./app hello
Hello!
$ ./app hello --hello='Allo!'
Allo!
$ ./app bye
Good bye
$ ./app bye --name='Alice'
Good bye Alice