Flags
Command line arguments parser with built-in validations.
Usage
The parseFlags
method takes as its first argument the arguments to be parsed,
usually Deno.args
, or a parse context. As the second
argument you can pass an options object. A list of all available options can be
found here.
Basic usage
If parseFlags
is called without defining specific flags with the options
object, all arguments are parsed and added to the flags object returned by the
parseFlags
method. All non-options arguments are added to the unknown
array
and all flags specified after the double dash (--
) are added to the literal
array.
import { parseFlags } from "https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/flags/mod.ts";
console.log(parseFlags(Deno.args));
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deno run https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/examples/flags/flags.ts -a foo -b bar
{
flags: { a: "foo", b: "bar" },
literal: [],
unknown: [],
stopEarly: false,
stopOnUnknown: false
}
deno run https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/examples/flags/flags.ts \
-x 3 \
-y.z -n5 \
-abc \
--beep=boop \
foo bar baz \
--deno.land \
--deno.com -- --cliffy
{
flags: {
x: "3",
y: { z: true },
n: "5",
a: true,
b: true,
c: true,
beep: "boop",
deno: { land: true, com: true }
},
literal: [ "--cliffy" ],
unknown: [ "foo", "bar", "baz" ],
stopEarly: false,
stopOnUnknown: false
}
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Define flags
You can specify flags with the options object. For all unknown or invalid flags
an ValidationError
is thrown. Read more about error handling
here. A list of all available flag options can be found
here.
import { parseFlags } from "https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/flags/mod.ts";
const { flags } = parseFlags(Deno.args, {
flags: [{
name: "help",
aliases: ["h"],
standalone: true,
}, {
name: "verbose",
aliases: ["v"],
collect: true,
value: (val: boolean, previous = 0) => val ? previous + 1 : 0,
}, {
name: "file",
aliases: ["f"],
type: "string",
}],
});
console.log(flags);
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deno run https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/examples/flags/options.ts -vvv -f ./example.ts
{ verbose: 3, file: "./example.ts" }
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Parse context
The parseFlags
method accepts also a parse context as first argument. The
context can either be a manually created object or the result of a previously
called parseFlags
method.
This can be used to parse command line flags in multiple steps, for example, when parsing options that precede a subcommand.
import { parseFlags } from "https://deno.land/x/cliffy@v1.0.0-rc.4/flags/mod.ts";
const globalFlags = [{
name: "foo-global",
alias: ["g"],
collect: true,
}];
const flags = [{
name: "foo",
alias: ["f"],
collect: true,
}];
const args = ["--foo-global", "cmd1", "--foo-global", "--foo", "arg1", "--foo"];
// Parse main command args (all flags until the first unknown argument).
const ctx = parseFlags(args, {
flags: globalFlags,
stopEarly: true, // Stop on first non option argument.
stopOnUnknown: true, // Stop on first option argument.
dotted: false, // Don't convert dotted option keys to nested objects.
});
// Shift sub-command from arguments.
const subCommand = ctx.unknown.shift();
// Parse all sub command args.
parseFlags(ctx, {
flags: [
...globalFlags,
...flags,
],
});
console.log("sub-command:", subCommand); // -> cmd1
console.log("options:", ctx.flags); // -> { fooGlobal: [ true, true ], foo: [ true, true ] }
console.log("arguments:", ctx.unknown); // -> [ "arg1" ]
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