Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

raptor-args

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
2
Versions
16
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

raptor-args

A concise command line arguments parser with robust type handling

  • 1.0.3
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
14K
decreased by-28.44%
Maintainers
2
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

raptor-args

A flexible and simple command line arguments parser that generates friendly help messages.

Installation

npm install raptor-args --save

Usage

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser(options);
var parsed = parser.parse(argsArray);

// parsed will be an object with properties corresponding to provided arguments

Simple Example

Parse arguments provided by process.argv:

Given the following JavaScript code to parse the args:

// Create a parser and parse process.argv
require('raptor-args').createParser({
        '--foo -f': 'boolean',
        '--bar -b': 'string'
    })
    .parse();

And the following command:

node app.js --foo -b b

The output will be:

//Output:
{
    foo: true,
    bar: 'baz'
}

You can also parse your own array of arguments instead of using process.argv:

// Create a parser and parse provided args
require('raptor-args').createParser({
        '--foo -f': 'boolean',
        '--bar -b': 'string'
    })
    .parse(['--foo', '-b', 'baz']);

//Output:
{
    foo: true,
    bar: 'baz'
}

You can also be more descriptive and add usage, examples, error handlers and validation checks:

// Create a parser:
require('raptor-args')
    .createParser({
        '--help': {
            type: 'string',
            description: 'Show this help message'
        },
        '--foo -f': {
            type: 'string',
            description: 'Some helpful description for "foo"'
        },
        '--bar -b': {
            type: 'string',
            description: 'Some helpful description for "bar"'
        }
    })
    .usage('Usage: $0 [options]')
    .example(
        'First example',
        '$0 --foo hello')
    .example(
        'Second example',
        '$0 --foo hello --bar world')
    .validate(function(result) {
        if (result.help) {
            this.printUsage();
            process.exit(0);
        }

        if (!result.foo || !result.bar) {
            this.printUsage();
            console.log('--foo or --bar is required');
            process.exit(1);
        }
    })
    .onError(function(err) {
        this.printUsage();
        console.error(err);
        process.exit(1);
    })
    .parse();

Running the above program with the --help argument will produce the following output:

Usage: args [options]

Examples:

  First example:
     args --foo hello

  Second example:
     args --foo hello --bar world

Options:

  --help Show this help message [string]

--foo -f Some helpful description for "foo" [string]

--bar -b Some helpful description for "bar" [string]

Aliases

Aliases can be provided as space-separated values for an option:

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '--foobar --foo -f': 'string', // "--foobar" has two aliases: "--foo" and "-f"
    '--hello -h': 'string',        // "--hello" has one alias: "-h"
});

parser.parse('--foo FOO -h HELLO'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    foobar: 'FOO',
    hello: 'HELLO'
}

// **NOTE**: Only the first entry is used to determine the target property name--not the aliases.

Booleans

An argument value of "true" or "false" is automatically converted to the corresponding boolean type. If a argument is prefixed with "no-" then it will be set to false.

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '--foo': 'boolean',
    '--bar': 'boolean'
});

parser.parse('--foo --no-bar'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    foo: true,
    bar: false
}

Arrays

Any argument with multiple values will result in an Array value, but if you want to force an array for a single value then you can append "[]" to the option type as shown in the following sample code:

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '--foo': 'string[]'
});

parser.parse('--foo a'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    foo: ['a']
}

parser.parse('--foo a b c'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    foo: ['a', 'b', 'c']
}

Wildcards

A parser will throw an error for unrecognized arguments unless wildcards are used as shown in the examples below.

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '--foo -f *': 'string[]' // Any unrecognized argument at the beginning is an alias for "foo"
});

parser.parse('a b --foo c'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    foo: ['a', 'b', 'c']
}
// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '*': null
});

parser.parse('a b --foo FOO --bar BAR'.split(' '));
// Output:
{
    '*': ['a', 'b'],
    foo: 'FOO',
    bar: 'BAR'
}

Complex Types

Square brackets can be used to begin and end complex types:

// Create a parser:
var parser = require('raptor-args').createParser({
    '--foo -f': 'boolean',
    '--plugins --plugin -p': {
        options: {
            '--module -m *': 'string',
            '-*': null
        }
    }
});

var parsed = parser.parse('--foo --plugins [ --module plugin1 -x -y ] [ plugin2 -z Hello ]'.split(' '));

// Output:
{
    foo: true,
    plugins: [
        {
            module: 'plugin1',
            x: true,
            y: true
        },
        {
            module: 'plugin2',
            z: 'Hello'
        }
    ]
}

Similar Projects

  • optimist - Popular but deprecated. Awkward API and not DRY as shown in the following comparison:

optimist:

var result = require('optimist')(args)
    .alias('h', 'help')
    .describe('h', 'Show this help message')
    .boolean('h')
    .alias('f', 'foo')
    .describe('f', 'Some helpful description for "foo"')
    .string('f')
    .alias('b', 'bar')
    .describe('b', 'Some helpful description for "bar"')
    .string('b')
    .argv;

raptor-args:

var result = require('raptor-args')
    .createParser({
        '--help':   { type: 'string', description: 'Show this help message' },
        '--foo -f': { type: 'string', description: 'Some helpful description for "foo"' },
        '--bar -b': { type: 'string', description: 'Some helpful description for "bar"' }
    })
    .parse();
  • yargs - A fork of optimist with documentation for those who speak Pirate.
  • minimist - Very few features (by design). Not DRY.

TODO

  • Support equal separator: --hello=world
  • Support number arg: -x256
  • Detect repeated declared options and throw an error
  • Add support for a default value
var parser = require('../')
    .createParser({
        '--foo -f': {
            type: 'boolean',
            defaultValue: true
        }
    });

Additional Reading

For module help, check out the test cases under the "test" directory.

License

MIT

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 06 Jan 2016

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc