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Contains global functions of Loyc.Utilities that don't belong in any specific class. More...
Contains global functions of Loyc.Utilities that don't belong in any specific class.
Static Public Member Functions | |
static void | ProcessCommandLineArguments (IList< string > args, ICollection< KeyValuePair< string, string >> options, string atFolder, IDictionary< char, string > shortOptions=null, InvertibleSet< string > twoArgOptions=null, int argLimit=0xFFFF, bool expandEnvVars=true, bool caseSensitiveLongOpts=false) |
Expands environment variables (e.g. TEMP%) and in a list of command-line arguments, and adds any options of the form "--opt" or "--opt=value" to a dictionary. More... | |
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inlinestatic |
Expands environment variables (e.g. TEMP%) and in a list of command-line arguments, and adds any options of the form "--opt" or "--opt=value" to a dictionary.
args | The original arguments to process. |
options | Any long options (arguments that start with "--") will be added to this dictionary, and removed from args . This parameter cannot be null. By default, long options are not case sensitive. In that case, the user's option name is converted to lower case. |
Long options are expected to have the form –ID or –ID=value, where ID matches the regex "[a-zA-Z_0-9-]+". If there is no "=" or ":", that's okay too. For example, –Id{foo} is equivalent to –Id={foo}; both yield in the name-value pair ("id", "{foo}"). If there is no value (no equals or colon), the value associated with the option is null.
atFolder | If a parameter has the form , the folder specified by atFolder will be searched for an options text file with the user-specified filename, and the contents of the file will be expanded into the list of arguments (split using SplitCommandLineArguments). The expanded list can contain new , which are also processed. To search in the current directory, use "". The may use an absolute path, which overrides this folder. To disable expansion, set this parameter to null. Whether the feature is enabled or disabled, are not removed from args , in case you want to be aware of the filenames afterward. |
shortOptions | A map from one-letter options that start with "-" rather than "--", to the name of the corresponding long option (this option can be null to ignore all short options.) For example, if this contains ('a', "all" ), and the input args contains "-a:foo", the pair ("all", "foo") will be added to options . If a value in this map is null, the key itself is used. Short options can be combined; for example -abc:foo is equivalent to -a -b -c:foo . Short options are always case-sensitive; to define an option that is not case sensitive, place two entries in the dictionary e.g. ('a', "all") and ('A', "all"). If the user specifies a short option letter that is not recognized, the entire command will be ignored and left in args. For example, if shortOptions contains only ('a', "all") but args contains "-ab=foo", the command is ignored and left in args . Rationale: -ab=foo might be a filename. |
On the other hand, if -a is a valid option then -a123
is also valid even when there is no option called '1'; the number "123" is treated as an argument to -a. Now, if '1' is a registered short option but '2' is not, then -a123
is equivalent to -a -1=23
.
twoArgOptions | A set of options in which the argument can be separated by a space from the option. For example, if the input is "--out foo.txt" and you want to recognize "foo.txt" as the argument to "--out", add the string "out" to this set. If you want to treat all options this way, use InvertibleSet{string}.All . Note: If the input is "--out:foo bar", "foo" is recognized as the argument to "--out" and "bar" is left alone, i.e. it is treated as unrelated. Short options participate automatically. For example if "-f" means "--foo", and twoArgOptions contains "foo", then "-f arg" is interpreted like "--foo=arg". |
The argument will not be treated as an argument if it starts with a dash, e.g. in –foo -*
, -*
will not be treated as an argument to –foo
, even if -*
is not a registered option.
argLimit | A limit placed on the number of arguments when expanding . Such a file may refer to itself, and this is the only protection provided against infinite recursive expansion. |
expandEnvVars | If true, environment variable references such as TEMP% are expanded by calling the standard method Environment.ExpandEnvironmentVariables. |
caseSensitiveLongOpts | If true, long options are case- sensitive. By default, long options are not case sensitive. |
Two types of options are recognized, short (-s) and long (–long), and only one argument is supported per option. The documentation is above.
You can choose whether to permit duplicate options or not. If you use a standard Dictionary{K,V} to hold the options, an exception will occur when this method calls Add() to add the duplicate. The exception is caught, the first ocurrance is kept, and a warning message is printed to MessageSink.Current.
To allow duplicates, store options in a different data structure such as List(KeyValuePair(string, string))
or BMultiMap(string,string)
.
DOS-style slash-options like /foo are not supported. Since Windows recognizes the forward slash as a path separator, forward-slash options can be recognized as paths. If you want to recognize them as options instead, you can preprocess the argument list, replacing every command that starts with "/" with a "--" command:
Globs (e.g. *.txt) are not recognized or expanded, but environment variables are expanded when expandEnvVars
is true.
Quote marks are not processed. An argument of "--a"
, with quote marks, is not recognized as an option (these quote marks should be removed before calling this method, e.g. G.SplitCommandLineArguments handles this.)