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Closed 7 years ago.
Improve this questionI've noticed the basic 'style' of most GNU core applications whereby arguments are:
--longoption
--longoption=value
or--longoption value
-abcdefg
(multiple options)-iuwww-data
(optioni
,u = www-data
)
They follow the above style. I want to avoid writing an argument parser if there's a library that does this using the above style. Is there one you know of?
getopt_long will do the job, here is an example from http://www.gnu.org/s/libc/manual/html_node/Getopt-Long-Option-Example.html
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <getopt.h>
/* Flag set by ‘--verbose’. */
static int verbose_flag;
int
main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int c;
while (1)
{
static struct option long_options[] =
{
/* These options set a flag. */
{"verbose", no_argument, &verbose_flag, 1},
{"brief", no_argument, &verbose_flag, 0},
/* These options don't set a flag.
We distinguish them by their indices. */
{"add", no_argument, 0, 'a'},
{"append", no_argument, 0, 'b'},
{"delete", required_argument, 0, 'd'},
{"create", required_argument, 0, 'c'},
{"file", required_argument, 0, 'f'},
{0, 0, 0, 0}
};
/* getopt_long stores the option index here. */
int option_index = 0;
c = getopt_long (argc, argv, "abc:d:f:",
long_options, &option_index);
/* Detect the end of the options. */
if (c == -1)
break;
switch (c)
{
case 0:
/* If this option set a flag, do nothing else now. */
if (long_options[option_index].flag != 0)
break;
printf ("option %s", long_options[option_index].name);
if (optarg)
printf (" with arg %s", optarg);
printf ("\n");
break;
case 'a':
puts ("option -a\n");
break;
case 'b':
puts ("option -b\n");
break;
case 'c':
printf ("option -c with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case 'd':
printf ("option -d with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case 'f':
printf ("option -f with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case '?':
/* getopt_long already printed an error message. */
break;
default:
abort ();
}
}
/* Instead of reporting ‘--verbose’
and ‘--brief’ as they are encountered,
we report the final status resulting from them. */
if (verbose_flag)
puts ("verbose flag is set");
/* Print any remaining command line arguments (not options). */
if (optind < argc)
{
printf ("non-option ARGV-elements: ");
while (optind < argc)
printf ("%s ", argv[optind++]);
putchar ('\n');
}
exit (0);
}
GNU provides getopt_long
, though they actually recommend argp
. Check out the GNU libc manual entry on parsing arguments.
http://argtable.sourceforge.net/
and
http://www.gnu.org/s/libc/manual/html_node/Parsing-Program-Arguments.html
Back in the day people just packaged getopt.c
and getopt.h
with their sources.
Here is a Google Code query for it. You could use that if you do not want to depend on GNU libc because you may need this on a different OS. But if you're on Linux then libc already gives it to you as the other answers suggested.
Google has open sourced the google-gflags library, a command line flag parsing library..
AFAIK, it doesn't provide a "long and short" version of each flag (so you can't combine in multiple options "-aeiou"), but it's trivial to use and doesn't require a centralized list of flags.
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