1Getopt::Long::DescriptiUvsee(r3)Contributed Perl DocumenGteattoipotn::Long::Descriptive(3)
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NAME

6       Getopt::Long::Descriptive - Getopt::Long, but simpler and more powerful
7

VERSION

9       version 0.103
10

SYNOPSIS

12         use Getopt::Long::Descriptive;
13
14         my ($opt, $usage) = describe_options(
15           'my-program %o <some-arg>',
16           [ 'server|s=s', "the server to connect to", { required => 1  } ],
17           [ 'port|p=i',   "the port to connect to",   { default  => 79 } ],
18           [],
19           [ 'verbose|v',  "print extra stuff"            ],
20           [ 'help',       "print usage message and exit", { shortcircuit => 1 } ],
21         );
22
23         print($usage->text), exit if $opt->help;
24
25         Client->connect( $opt->server, $opt->port );
26
27         print "Connected!\n" if $opt->verbose;
28
29       ...and running "my-program --help" will produce:
30
31         my-program [-psv] [long options...] <some-arg>
32           -s --server     the server to connect to
33           -p --port       the port to connect to
34
35           -v --verbose    print extra stuff
36           --help          print usage message and exit
37

DESCRIPTION

39       Getopt::Long::Descriptive is yet another Getopt library.  It's built
40       atop Getopt::Long, and gets a lot of its features, but tries to avoid
41       making you think about its huge array of options.
42
43       It also provides usage (help) messages, data validation, and a few
44       other useful features.
45

FUNCTIONS

47       Getopt::Long::Descriptive only exports one routine by default:
48       "describe_options".  All GLD's exports are exported by Sub::Exporter.
49
50   describe_options
51         my ($opt, $usage) = describe_options($usage_desc, @opt_spec, \%arg);
52
53       This routine inspects @ARGV for options that match the supplied spec.
54       If all the options are valid then it returns the options given and an
55       object for generating usage messages; if not then it dies with an
56       explanation of what was wrong and a usage message.
57
58       The $opt object will be a dynamically-generated subclass of
59       Getopt::Long::Descriptive::Opts.  In brief, each of the options in
60       @opt_spec becomes an accessor method on the object, using the first-
61       given name, with dashes converted to underscores.  For more
62       information, see the documentation for the Opts class.
63
64       The $usage object will be a Getopt::Long::Descriptive::Usage object,
65       which provides a "text" method to get the text of the usage message and
66       "die" to die with it.  For more methods and options, consults the
67       documentation for the Usage class.
68
69       $usage_desc
70
71       The $usage_desc parameter to "describe_options" is a "sprintf"-like
72       string that is used in generating the first line of the usage message.
73       It's a one-line summary of how the command is to be invoked.  A typical
74       usage description might be:
75
76         $usage_desc = "%c %o <source> <desc>";
77
78       %c will be replaced with what Getopt::Long::Descriptive thinks is the
79       program name (it's computed from $0, see "prog_name").
80
81       %o will be replaced with a list of the short options, as well as the
82       text "[long options...]" if any have been defined.
83
84       The rest of the usage description can be used to summarize what
85       arguments are expected to follow the program's options, and is entirely
86       free-form.
87
88       Literal "%" characters will need to be written as "%%", just like with
89       "sprintf".
90
91       @opt_spec
92
93       The @opt_spec part of the args to "describe_options" is used to
94       configure option parsing and to produce the usage message.  Each entry
95       in the list is an arrayref describing one option, like this:
96
97         @opt_spec = (
98           [ "verbose|V" => "be noisy"       ],
99           [ "logfile=s" => "file to log to" ],
100         );
101
102       The first value in the arrayref is a Getopt::Long-style option
103       specification.  In brief, they work like this:  each one is a pipe-
104       delimited list of names, optionally followed by a type declaration.
105       Type declarations are '=x' or ':x', where "=" means a value is required
106       and ":" means it is optional.  x may be 's' to indicate a string is
107       required, 'i' for an integer, or 'f' for a number with a fractional
108       part.  The type spec may end in "@" to indicate that the option may
109       appear multiple times.
110
111       For more information on how these work, see the Getopt::Long
112       documentation.
113
114       The first name given should be the canonical name, as it will be used
115       as the accessor method on the $opt object.  Dashes in the name will be
116       converted to underscores, and all letters will be lowercased.  For this
117       reason, all options should generally have a long-form name.
118
119       The second value in the arrayref is a description of the option, for
120       use in the usage message.
121
122       Special Option Specifications
123
124       If the option specification (arrayref) is empty, it will have no effect
125       other than causing a blank line to appear in the usage message.
126
127       If the option specification contains only one element, it will be
128       printed in the usage message with no other effect.
129
130       If the option specification contains a third element, it adds extra
131       constraints or modifiers to the interpretation and validation of the
132       value.  These are the keys that may be present in that hashref, and how
133       they behave:
134
135       implies
136             implies => 'bar'
137             implies => [qw(foo bar)]
138             implies => { foo => 1, bar => 2 }
139
140           If option A has an "implies" entry, then if A is given, other
141           options will be enabled.  The value may be a single option to set,
142           an arrayref of options to set, or a hashref of options to set to
143           specific values.
144
145       required
146             required => 1
147
148           If an option is required, failure to provide the option will result
149           in "describe_options" printing the usage message and exiting.
150
151       hidden
152             hidden => 1
153
154           This option will not show up in the usage text.
155
156           You can achieve the same behavior by using the string "hidden" for
157           the option's description.
158
159       one_of
160             one_of => \@subopt_specs
161
162           This is useful for a group of options that are related.  Each
163           option spec is added to the list for normal parsing and validation.
164
165           Your option name will end up with a value of the name of the option
166           that was chosen.  For example, given the following spec:
167
168             [ "mode" => hidden => { one_of => [
169               [ "get|g"  => "get the value" ],
170               [ "set|s"  => "set the value" ],
171               [ "delete" => "delete it" ],
172             ] } ],
173
174           No usage text for 'mode' will be displayed, but text for get, set,
175           and delete will be displayed.
176
177           If more than one of get, set, or delete is given, an error will be
178           thrown.
179
180           So, given the @opt_spec above, and an @ARGV of "('--get')", the
181           following would be true:
182
183             $opt->get == 1;
184
185             $opt->mode eq 'get';
186
187           Note: "get" would not be set if "mode" defaulted to 'get' and no
188           arguments were passed in.
189
190           Even though the option sub-specs for "one_of" are meant to be
191           'first class' specs, some options don't make sense with them, e.g.
192           "required".
193
194           As a further shorthand, you may specify "one_of" options using this
195           form:
196
197             [ mode => \@option_specs, \%constraints ]
198
199       shortcircuit
200             shortcircuit => 1
201
202           If this option is present no other options will be returned.  Other
203           options present will be checked for proper types, but not for
204           constraints.  This provides a way of specifying "--help" style
205           options.
206
207       Params::Validate
208           In addition, any constraint understood by Params::Validate may be
209           used.
210
211           For example, to accept positive integers:
212
213             [ 'max-iterations=i', "maximum number of iterations",
214               { callbacks => { positive => sub { shift() > 0 } } } ],
215
216           (Internally, all constraints are translated into Params::Validate
217           options or callbacks.)
218
219       %arg
220
221       The %arg to "describe_options" is optional.  If the last parameter is a
222       hashref, it contains extra arguments to modify the way
223       "describe_options" works.  Valid arguments are:
224
225         getopt_conf   - an arrayref of strings, passed to Getopt::Long::Configure
226         show_defaults - a boolean which controls whether an option's default
227                         value (if applicable) is shown as part of the usage message
228                         (for backward compatibility this defaults to false)
229
230   prog_name
231       This routine, exported on demand, returns the basename of $0, grabbed
232       at compile-time.  You can override this guess by calling
233       "prog_name($string)" yourself.
234

OTHER EXPORTS

236   "-types"
237       Any of the Params::Validate type constants ("SCALAR", etc.) can be
238       imported as well.  You can get all of them at once by importing
239       "-types".
240
241   "-all"
242       This import group will import "-type", "describe_options", and
243       "prog_name".
244

CUSTOMIZING

246       Getopt::Long::Descriptive uses Sub::Exporter to build and export the
247       "describe_options" routine.  By writing a new class that extends
248       Getopt::Long::Descriptive, the behavior of the constructed
249       "describe_options" routine can be changed.
250
251       The following methods can be overridden:
252
253   usage_class
254         my $class = Getopt::Long::Descriptive->usage_class;
255
256       This returns the class to be used for constructing a Usage object, and
257       defaults to Getopt::Long::Descriptive::Usage.
258

SEE ALSO

260       ·   Getopt::Long
261
262       ·   Params::Validate
263

AUTHORS

265       ·   Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@cpan.org>
266
267       ·   Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
268

CONTRIBUTORS

270       ·   Arthur Axel 'fREW' Schmidt <frioux@gmail.com>
271
272       ·   Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
273
274       ·   Diab Jerius <djerius@cfa.harvard.edu>
275
276       ·   Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@pobox.com>
277
278       ·   Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@weftsoar.net>
279
280       ·   Harley Pig <harleypig@gmail.com>
281
282       ·   hdp@cpan.org <hdp@cpan.org@fc0e91e4-031c-0410-8307-be39b06d7656>
283
284       ·   Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
285
286       ·   Niels Thykier <niels@thykier.net>
287
288       ·   Olaf Alders <olaf@wundersolutions.com>
289
290       ·   Roman Hubacek <roman.hubacek@centrum.cz>
291
292       ·   Smylers <SMYLERS@cpan.fsck.com>
293
294       ·   Thomas Neumann <blacky+perl@fluffbunny.de>
295
296       ·   zhouzhen1 <zhouzhen1@gmail.com>
297
299       This software is copyright (c) 2005 by Hans Dieter Pearcey.
300
301       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
302       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
303
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305
306perl v5.28.1                      2018-08-02      Getopt::Long::Descriptive(3)
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