A fork of a simple zero dependency command line argument parser for Node.
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README.md

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argv

argv is a simple, zero dependency, command line argument parser for NodeJS. For a more feature-full CLI parser, checkout Commander.js or Yargs

Installation

$ npm install argv

Usage

var argv = require( 'argv' );
var args = argv.option( options ).run();
-> { targets: [], options: {} }

Run

Runs the argument parser on the global arguments. Custom arguments array can be used by passing into this method

// Parses default arguments 'process.argv.slice( 2 )'
argv.run();

// Parses array instead
argv.run(["--option=123", "-o", "123"]);

Options

argv is a strict argument parser, which means all options must be defined before parsing starts.

argv.option({
  name: "option",
  short: "o",
  type: "string",
  description: "Defines an option for your script",
  example: "'script --option=value' or 'script -o value'",
  onset: function (args) {
    args; // Object of current arguments parsed
  },
});

Modules

Modules are nested commands for more complicated scripts. Each module has it's own set of options that have to be defined independently of the root options.

argv.mod({
	mod: 'module',
	description: 'Description of what the module is used for',
	options: [ list of options ]
});

Types

Types convert option values to useful JS objects. They are defined along with each option.

  • string: Ensure values are strings
  • path: Converts value into a fully resolved path.
  • integer | int: Converts value into an integer
  • float: Converts value into a float number
  • boolean | bool: Converts value into a boolean object. 'true' and '1' are converted to true, everything else is false.
  • csv: Converts value into an array by splitting on comma's.
  • list: Allows for option to be defined multiple times, and each value added to an array
  • [list|csv],[type]: Combo type that allows you to create a list or csv and convert each individual value into a type.
argv.option([
	{
		name: 'option',
		type: 'csv,int'
	},
	{
		name: 'path',
		short: 'p',
		type: 'list,path'
	}
]);

// csv and int combo
$ script --option=123,456.001,789.01
-> option: [ 123, 456, 789 ]

// list and path combo
$ script -p /path/to/file1 -p /path/to/file2
-> option: [ '/path/to/file1', '/path/to/file2' ]

You can also create your own custom type for special conversions.

argv.type( 'squared', function( value ) {
	value = parseFloat( value );
	return value * value;
});

argv.option({
	name: 'square',
	short: 's',
	type: 'squared'
});

$ script -s 2
-> 4

Version

Defining the scripts version number will add the version option and print it out when asked.

argv.version( 'v1.0' );

$ script --version
v1.0

Info

Custom information can be displayed at the top of the help printout using this method

argv.info( 'Special script info' );

$ script --help

Special script info

... Rest of Help Doc ...

Clear

If you have competing scripts accessing the argv object, you can clear out any previous options that may have been set.

argv.clear().option([new options()]);

Help

argv injects a default help option initially and on clears. The help() method triggers the help printout.

argv.help();