1App::Cmd::Simple(3)   User Contributed Perl Documentation  App::Cmd::Simple(3)
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NAME

6       App::Cmd::Simple - a helper for building one-command App::Cmd
7       applications
8

VERSION

10       version 0.311
11

SYNOPSIS

13       in simplecmd:
14
15         use YourApp::Cmd;
16         Your::Cmd->run;
17
18       in YourApp/Cmd.pm:
19
20         package YourApp::Cmd;
21         use base qw(App::Cmd::Simple);
22
23         sub opt_spec {
24           return (
25             [ "blortex|X",  "use the blortex algorithm" ],
26             [ "recheck|r",  "recheck all results"       ],
27           );
28         }
29
30         sub validate_args {
31           my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
32
33           # no args allowed but options!
34           $self->usage_error("No args allowed") if @$args;
35         }
36
37         sub execute {
38           my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
39
40           my $result = $opt->{blortex} ? blortex() : blort();
41
42           recheck($result) if $opt->{recheck};
43
44           print $result;
45         }
46
47       and, finally, at the command line:
48
49         knight!rjbs$ simplecmd --recheck
50
51         All blorts successful.
52

SUBCLASSING

54       When writing a subclass of App::Cmd:Simple, there are only a few
55       methods that you might want to implement.  They behave just like the
56       same-named methods in App::Cmd.
57
58   opt_spec
59       This method should be overridden to provide option specifications.
60       (This is list of arguments passed to "describe_options" from
61       Getopt::Long::Descriptive, after the first.)
62
63       If not overridden, it returns an empty list.
64
65   validate_args
66         $cmd->validate_args(\%opt, \@args);
67
68       This method is passed a hashref of command line options (as processed
69       by Getopt::Long::Descriptive) and an arrayref of leftover arguments.
70       It may throw an exception (preferably by calling "usage_error") if they
71       are invalid, or it may do nothing to allow processing to continue.
72
73   execute
74         Your::App::Cmd::Simple->execute(\%opt, \@args);
75
76       This method does whatever it is the command should do!  It is passed a
77       hash reference of the parsed command-line options and an array
78       reference of left over arguments.
79

WARNINGS

81       This should be considered experimental!  Although it is probably not
82       going to change much, don't build your business model around it yet,
83       okay?
84
85       App::Cmd::Simple is not rich in black magic, but it does do some
86       somewhat gnarly things to make an App::Cmd::Simple look as much like an
87       App::Cmd::Command as possible.  This means that you can't deviate too
88       much from the sort of thing shown in the synopsis as you might like.
89       If you're doing something other than writing a fairly simple command,
90       and you want to screw around with the App::Cmd-iness of your program,
91       Simple might not be the best choice.
92
93       One specific warning...  if you are writing a program with the
94       App::Cmd::Simple class embedded in it, you must call import on the
95       class.  That's how things work.  You can just do this:
96
97         YourApp::Cmd->import->run;
98

AUTHOR

100       Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
101
103       This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Ricardo Signes.
104
105       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
106       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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110perl v5.12.3                      2011-03-18               App::Cmd::Simple(3)
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