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NAME

       Arg - Parsing of command line arguments.

Module

       Module   Arg

Documentation

       Module Arg
        : sig end

       Parsing of command line arguments.

       This  module  provides  a general mechanism for extracting options and arguments from the command line to
       the program. For example:

            let usage_msg = "append [-verbose] <file1> [<file2>] ... -o <output>"
            let verbose = ref false
            let input_files = ref []
            let output_file = ref ""

            let anon_fun filename =
              input_files := filename::!input_files

            let speclist =
              [("-verbose", Arg.Set verbose, "Output debug information");
               ("-o", Arg.Set_string output_file, "Set output file name")]

            let () =
              Arg.parse speclist anon_fun usage_msg;
              (* Main functionality here *)

       Syntax of command lines: A keyword is a character string starting with a - .   An  option  is  a  keyword
       alone  or  followed  by  an  argument.   The  types of keywords are: Unit , Bool , Set , Clear , String ,
       Set_string , Int , Set_int , Float , Set_float , Tuple , Symbol , Rest , Rest_all and Expand .

       Unit , Set and Clear keywords take no argument.

       A Rest or Rest_all keyword takes the remainder of the  command  line  as  arguments.  (More  explanations
       below.)

       Every other keyword takes the following word on the command line as argument.  For compatibility with GNU
       getopt_long,  keyword=arg  is  also  allowed.   Arguments  not preceded by a keyword are called anonymous
       arguments.

       Examples ( cmd is assumed to be the command name):

       - cmd -flag (a unit option)

       - cmd -int 1 (an int option with argument 1 )

       - cmd -string foobar (a string option with argument "foobar" )

       - cmd -float 12.34 (a float option with argument 12.34 )

       - cmd a b c (three anonymous arguments: "a" , "b" , and "c" )

       - cmd a b -- c d (two anonymous arguments and a rest option with two arguments)

       Rest takes a function that is called repeatedly for each remaining command line argument.  Rest_all takes
       a function that is called once, with the list of all remaining arguments.

       Note that if no arguments follow a Rest keyword then the function  is  not  called  at  all  whereas  the
       function for a Rest_all keyword is called with an empty list.

       Alert  unsynchronized_access.   The Arg module relies on a mutable global state, parsing functions should
       only be called from a single domain.

       type spec =
        | Unit of (unit -> unit)
         (* Call the function with unit argument
        *)
        | Bool of (bool -> unit)
         (* Call the function with a bool argument
        *)
        | Set of bool ref
         (* Set the reference to true
        *)
        | Clear of bool ref
         (* Set the reference to false
        *)
        | String of (string -> unit)
         (* Call the function with a string argument
        *)
        | Set_string of string ref
         (* Set the reference to the string argument
        *)
        | Int of (int -> unit)
         (* Call the function with an int argument
        *)
        | Set_int of int ref
         (* Set the reference to the int argument
        *)
        | Float of (float -> unit)
         (* Call the function with a float argument
        *)
        | Set_float of float ref
         (* Set the reference to the float argument
        *)
        | Tuple of spec list
         (* Take several arguments according to the spec list
        *)
        | Symbol of string list * (string -> unit)
         (* Take one of the symbols as argument and call the function with the symbol
        *)
        | Rest of (string -> unit)
         (* Stop interpreting keywords and call the function with each remaining argument
        *)
        | Rest_all of (string list -> unit)
         (* Stop interpreting keywords and call the function with all remaining arguments
        *)
        | Expand of (string -> string array)
         (* If the remaining arguments to process are of  the  form  ["-foo";  "arg"]  @  rest  where  "foo"  is
       registered  as  Expand  f  ,  then  the  arguments  f  "arg"  @  rest  are  processed.  Only  allowed  in
       parse_and_expand_argv_dynamic .
        *)

       The concrete type describing the behavior associated with a keyword.

       type key = string

       type doc = string

       type usage_msg = string

       type anon_fun = string -> unit

       val parse : (key * spec * doc) list -> anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit

       Arg.parse speclist anon_fun usage_msg parses the command line.  speclist is a list of triples (key, spec,
       doc) .  key is the option keyword, it must start with a '-' character.  spec gives the  option  type  and
       the  function  to  call  when this option is found on the command line.  doc is a one-line description of
       this option.  anon_fun is called on anonymous arguments.  The functions in spec and anon_fun  are  called
       in the same order as their arguments appear on the command line.

       If  an  error  occurs,  Arg.parse exits the program, after printing to standard error an error message as
       follows:

       -  The reason for the error: unknown option, invalid or missing argument, etc.

       - usage_msg

       -  The list of options, each followed by the corresponding doc string.   Beware:  options  that  have  an
       empty doc string will not be included in the list.

       For  the  user  to  be  able to specify anonymous arguments starting with a - , include for example ("-",
       String anon_fun, doc) in speclist .

       By default, parse recognizes two unit options, -help and --help , which will  print  to  standard  output
       usage_msg  and  the list of options, and exit the program.  You can override this behaviour by specifying
       your own -help and --help options in speclist .

       val parse_dynamic : (key * spec * doc) list ref -> anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit

       Same as Arg.parse , except that the speclist argument is a  reference  and  may  be  updated  during  the
       parsing. A typical use for this feature is to parse command lines of the form:

       -     command  subcommand  options  where  the  list  of  options  depends on the value of the subcommand
       argument.

       Since 4.01

       val parse_argv : ?current:int ref -> string array -> (key * spec * doc) list -> anon_fun -> usage_msg  ->
       unit

       Arg.parse_argv  ~current args speclist anon_fun usage_msg parses the array args as if it were the command
       line.  It uses and updates the value of ~current (if given), or Arg.current .  You  must  set  it  before
       calling  parse_argv  .  The initial value of current is the index of the program name (argument 0) in the
       array.  If an error occurs, Arg.parse_argv raises Arg.Bad with the error message as argument.  If  option
       -help or --help is given, Arg.parse_argv raises Arg.Help with the help message as argument.

       val  parse_argv_dynamic  : ?current:int ref -> string array -> (key * spec * doc) list ref -> anon_fun ->
       string -> unit

       Same as Arg.parse_argv , except that the speclist argument is a reference and may be updated  during  the
       parsing.  See Arg.parse_dynamic .

       Since 4.01

       val  parse_and_expand_argv_dynamic  :  int  ref  ->  string  array  ref -> (key * spec * doc) list ref ->
       anon_fun -> string -> unit

       Same as Arg.parse_argv_dynamic , except that the argv argument is a reference and may be  updated  during
       the parsing of Expand arguments.  See Arg.parse_argv_dynamic .

       Since 4.05

       val parse_expand : (key * spec * doc) list -> anon_fun -> usage_msg -> unit

       Same  as  Arg.parse  ,  except that the Expand arguments are allowed and the Arg.current reference is not
       updated.

       Since 4.05

       exception Help of string

       Raised by Arg.parse_argv when the user asks for help.

       exception Bad of string

       Functions in spec or anon_fun can raise Arg.Bad with  an  error  message  to  reject  invalid  arguments.
       Arg.Bad is also raised by Arg.parse_argv in case of an error.

       val usage : (key * spec * doc) list -> usage_msg -> unit

       Arg.usage  speclist  usage_msg  prints to standard error an error message that includes the list of valid
       options.  This is the same message that Arg.parse prints in case of error.  speclist  and  usage_msg  are
       the same as for Arg.parse .

       val usage_string : (key * spec * doc) list -> usage_msg -> string

       Returns the message that would have been printed by Arg.usage , if provided with the same parameters.

       val align : ?limit:int -> (key * spec * doc) list -> (key * spec * doc) list

       Align  the  documentation strings by inserting spaces at the first alignment separator (tab or, if tab is
       not found, space), according to the length of the keyword.   Use  a  alignment  separator  as  the  first
       character in a doc string if you want to align the whole string.  The doc strings corresponding to Symbol
       arguments are aligned on the next line.

       val current : int ref

       Position  (in  Sys.argv  )  of  the  argument  being processed.  You can change this value, e.g. to force
       Arg.parse to skip some arguments.  Arg.parse uses the initial  value  of  Arg.current  as  the  index  of
       argument 0 (the program name) and starts parsing arguments at the next element.

       val read_arg : string -> string array

       Arg.read_arg file reads newline-terminated command line arguments from file file .

       Since 4.05

       val read_arg0 : string -> string array

       Identical to Arg.read_arg but assumes null character terminated command line arguments.

       Since 4.05

       val write_arg : string -> string array -> unit

       Arg.write_arg  file  args writes the arguments args newline-terminated into the file file . If any of the
       arguments in args contains a newline, use Arg.write_arg0 instead.

       Since 4.05

       val write_arg0 : string -> string array -> unit

       Identical to Arg.write_arg but uses the null character for terminator instead of newline.

       Since 4.05

OCamldoc                                           2024-08-29                                            Arg(3o)