开发者

NDesk.Options/Mono.Options: Parameter with multiple key/value pairs

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-02 20:00 出处:网络
I need to parse the following command line syntax: MyApplication.exe /p1 key1=value1 key2=value2 key3=value3 /p2

I need to parse the following command line syntax:

MyApplication.exe /p1 key1=value1 key2=value2 key3=value3 /p2

key1, key2 & key3 belong to parameter p1.

I'开发者_如何学运维ve found Example #3 in the documentation, which shows a way to parse for a single key/value pair.

Is parsing for multiple key/value pairs for a single parameter possible with NDesk.Options


There's a more fundamental question in play: is there a limit to the number of key=value sets on the command line?

If the number of key=value sets is variable, then you want to use argument runs as permitted by the <> default handler:

Dictionary<string, string> cur = null;
Dictionary<string, string> p1 = new Dictionary<string, string>();
Dictionary<string, string> p2 = new Dictionary<string, string>();
var p = new OptionSet () {
    { "p1", v => { cur = p1; } },
    { "p2", v => { cur = p2; } },
    { "<>", v => {
        string[] values = v.Split (new[]{'=', ':'}, 2);
        cur.Add (values [0], values [1]);
    } },
};

This will split all key=value options after /p1 and add them to the p1 dictionary:

p.Parse (new[]{"/p1", "key1=value1", "key2=value2", "/p2"});
// `p1` now contains { { "key1", "value1" }, {"key2", "value2" } }

For obvious reasons, I'd consider the above to be the reasonable way to go.

However, if there will always be 3 sets (and thus 6 required values), you could instead create an Option subclass which requires 6 values:

class ActionOption<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6> : Option {
    Action<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6> action;
    public ActionOption (string prototype, string description,
             Action<T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6> action)
        : base (prototype, description, 6)
    {
        this.action = action;
    }

    protected override void OnParseComplete (OptionContext c)
    {
        action (
                Parse<T1>(c.OptionValues [0], c)),
                Parse<T2>(c.OptionValues [1], c)),
                Parse<T3>(c.OptionValues [2], c)),
                Parse<T4>(c.OptionValues [3], c)),
                Parse<T5>(c.OptionValues [4], c)),
                Parse<T6>(c.OptionValues [5], c)));
    }
}

You can then provide this ActionOption to OptionSet.Add(Option):

var p = new OptionSet {
    new ActionOption<string, string, string, string, string, string> (
            "p1", null, (a, b, c, d, e, f) => {...}),
};


NDesk.Options has special syntax to suport exactly this:

        var pars = new Hashtable();
        var opts = new NDesk.Options.OptionSet{
            {"p={:}{/}", (n,v) => pars.Add(n, v)}
        };

Now you can run your program with command line like this:

-p=key1:value1 -p=key2/value2

Notice, that you can set pairs delimiter in options configuration. In this example it is [:/]

0

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消