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NAME
Getopt::Euclid - Executable Uniform Command-Line Interface Descriptions
VERSION
This document describes Getopt::Euclid version 0.4.5
SYNOPSIS
use Getopt::Euclid;
if ($ARGV{-i}) {
print "Interactive mode...\n";
}
for my $x (0..$ARGV{-size}{h}-1) {
for my $y (0..$ARGV{-size}{w}-1) {
do_something_with($x, $y);
}
}
__END__
=head1 NAME
yourprog - Your program here
=head1 VERSION
This documentation refers to yourprog version 1.9.4
=head1 USAGE
yourprog [options] -s[ize]=<h>x<w> -o[ut][file] <file>
=head1 REQUIRED ARGUMENTS
=over
=item -s[ize]=<h>x<w>
Specify size of simulation
=for Euclid:
h.type: int > 0
h.default: 24
w.type: int >= 10
w.default: 80
=item -o[ut][file] <file>
Specify output file
=for Euclid:
file.type: writable
file.default: '-'
=back
=head1 OPTIONS
=over
=item -i
Specify interactive simulation
=item -l[[en][gth]] <l>
Length of simulation. The default is l.default
=for Euclid:
l.type: int > 0
l.default: 99
=item --debug [<log_level>]
Set the log level. Default is log_level.default but if you provide --debug,
then it is log_level.opt_default.
=for Euclid:
log_level.type: int
log_level.default: 0
log_level.opt_default: 1
=item --version
=item --usage
=item --help
=item --man
Print the usual program information
=back
Remainder of documentation starts here...
=head1 AUTHOR
Damian Conway (DCONWAY@CPAN.org)
=head1 BUGS
There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in this code.
Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2005, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
and/or modified under the terms of the Perl Artistic License
(see http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html)
DESCRIPTION
Getopt::Euclid uses your program's own POD documentation to create a
powerful command-line argument parser. This ensures that your program's
documented interface and its actual interface always agree.
The created command-line argument parser includes many features such as
argument type checking, required arguments, exclusive arguments,
optional arguments with default values, automatic usage message, ...
To use the module, simply write the following at the top of your
program:
use Getopt::Euclid;
This will cause Getopt::Euclid to be require'd and its import method
will be called. It is important that the import method be allowed to
run, so do not invoke Getopt::Euclid in the following manner:
# Will not work
use Getopt::Euclid ();
When the module is loaded within a regular Perl program, it will:
1. locate any POD in the same *.pl file or its associated *.pod file.
2. extract information from that POD, most especially from the =head1
REQUIRED ARGUMENTS and =head1 OPTIONS sections,
3. build a parser that parses the arguments and options the POD
specifies,
4. remove the command-line arguments from @ARGV and parse them, and
5. put the results in the global %ARGV variable (or into specifically
named optional variables, if you request that -- see "Exporting
option variables").
As a special case, if the module is loaded within some other module
(i.e. from within a .pm file), it still locates and extracts POD
information, but instead of parsing @ARGV immediately, it caches that
information and installs an import() subroutine in the caller module.
This new import() acts just like Getopt::Euclid's own import, except
that it adds the POD from the caller module to the POD of the callee.
All of which just means you can put some or all of your CLI
specification in a module, rather than in the application's source
file. See "Module interface" for more details.
INTERFACE
Program interface
You write:
use Getopt::Euclid;
and your command-line is parsed automagically.
Module interface
import()
You write:
use Getopt::Euclid;
and your module will then act just like Getopt::Euclid (i.e. you can
use your module instead of Getopt::Euclid>, except that your module's
POD will also be prepended to the POD of any module that loads yours.
In other words, you can use Getopt::Euclid in a module to create a
standard set of CLI arguments, which can then be added to any
application simply by loading your module.
To accomplish this trick Getopt::Euclid installs an import()
subroutine in your module. If your module already has an import()
subroutine defined, terrible things happen. So do not do that.
You may also short-circuit the import method within your calling
program to have the POD from several modules included for argument
parsing.
use Module1::Getopt (); # No argument parsing
use Module2::Getopt (); # No argument parsing
use Getopt::Euclid; # Arguments parsed
process_args()
Alternatively, to parse arguments from a source different from @ARGV,
use the process_args() subroutine.
use Getopt::Euclid qw(:defer);
my @args = ( '-in', 'file.txt', '-out', 'results.txt' );
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@args);
If you want to use the :minimal or :vars mode in this type of
scenario, you can pass extra options to process_args():
use Getopt::Euclid qw(:defer);
my @args = ( '-in', 'file.txt', '-out', 'results.txt' );
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@args, {-minimal => 1, -vars => 'prefix_'});
This is particularly when you plan on processing POD manually.
process_pods()
Similarly, to parse argument specifications from a source different
than the current script (and its dependencies), use the
process_pods() subroutine.
use Getopt::Euclid ();
my @pods = ( 'script.pl', 'Module.pm' );
$Getopt::Euclid::MAN = Getopt::Euclid->process_pods(\@pods, {-strict => 1});
my @args = ( '-in', 'file.txt', '-out', 'results.txt' );
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@args);
By default, this method will look for .pod files associated with the
given .pl and .pm files and use these .pod files preferentially when
available. Set -strict to 1 to only use the given files.
POD interface
This is where all the action is. POD markup can be placed in a .pod
file that has the same prefix as the corresponding Perl file.
Alternatively, POD can be inserted anywhere in the Perl code, but is
typically added either after an __END__ statement (like in the
SYNOPSIS), or interspersed in the code:
use Getopt::Euclid;
=head1 NAME
yourprog - Your program here
=head1 REQUIRED ARGUMENTS
=over
=item -s[ize]=<h>x<w>
Specify size of simulation
=for Euclid:
h.type: int > 0
h.default: 24
w.type: int >= 10
w.default: 80
=back
=head1 OPTIONS
=over
=item -i
Specify interactive simulation
=back
=cut
# Getopt::Euclid has parsed commandline parameters and stored them in %ARGV
if ($ARGV{-i}) {
print "Interactive mode...\n";
}
for my $x (0..$ARGV{-size}{h}-1) {
for my $y (0..$ARGV{-size}{w}-1) {
do_something_with($x, $y);
}
}
When Getopt::Euclid is loaded in a non-.pm file, it searches that file
for the following POD documentation:
=head1 NAME
Getopt::Euclid ignores the name specified here. In fact, if you use
the standard --help, --usage, --man, --podfile, or --version
arguments (see "Standard arguments"), the module replaces the name
specified in this POD section with the actual name by which the
program was invoked (i.e. with $0).
=head1 USAGE
Getopt::Euclid ignores the usage line specified here. If you use the
standard --help, --usage, --man or --podfile arguments, the module
replaces the usage line specified in this POD section with a usage
line that reflects the actual interface that the module has
constructed.
=head1 VERSION
Getopt::Euclid extracts the current version number from this POD
section. To do that it simply takes the first substring that matches
<digit>.<digit> or <digit>_<digit>. It also accepts one or more
additional trailing .<digit> or _<digit>, allowing for multi-level
and "alpha" version numbers such as:
=head1 VERSION
This is version 1.2.3
or:
=head1 VERSION
This is alpha release 1.2_34
You may also specify the version number in your code. However, in
order for Getopt::Euclid to properly read it, it must be in a BEGIN
block:
BEGIN { use version; our $VERSION = qv('1.2.3') }
use Getopt::Euclid;
Euclid stores the version as $Getopt::Euclid::SCRIPT_VERSION.
=head1 REQUIRED ARGUMENTS
Getopt::Euclid uses the specifications in this POD section to build a
parser for command-line arguments. That parser requires that every
one of the specified arguments is present in any command-line
invocation. See "Specifying arguments" for details of the
specification syntax.
The actual headings that Getopt::Euclid can recognize here are:
=head1 [STANDARD|STD|PROGRAM|SCRIPT|CLI|COMMAND[-| ]LINE] [REQUIRED|MANDATORY] [PARAM|PARAMETER|ARG|ARGUMENT][S]
Caveat: Do not put additional subheadings (=headX) inside the
REQUIRED ARGUMENTS section.
=head1 OPTIONS
Getopt::Euclid uses the specifications in this POD section to build a
parser for command-line arguments. That parser does not require that
any of the specified arguments is actually present in a command-line
invocation. Again, see "Specifying arguments" for details of the
specification syntax.
Typically a program will specify both REQUIRED ARGUMENTS and OPTIONS,
but there is no requirement that it supply both, or either.
The actual headings that Getopt::Euclid recognizes here are:
=head1 [STANDARD|STD|PROGRAM|SCRIPT|CLI|COMMAND[-| ]LINE] OPTION[AL|S] [PARAM|PARAMETER|ARG|ARGUMENT][S]
Caveat: Do not put additional subheadings (=headX) inside the
REQUIRED ARGUMENTS section.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Getopt::Euclid prints this section whenever the standard --version
option is specified on the command-line.
The actual heading that Getopt::Euclid recognizes here is any heading
containing any of the words "COPYRIGHT", "LICENCE", or "LICENSE".
Specifying arguments
Each required or optional argument is specified in the POD in the
following format:
=item ARGUMENT_STRUCTURE
ARGUMENT_DESCRIPTION
=for Euclid:
ARGUMENT_OPTIONS
PLACEHOLDER_CONSTRAINTS
Argument structure
* Each argument is specified as an =item.
* Any part(s) of the specification that appear in square brackets are
treated as optional.
* Any parts that appear in angle brackets are placeholders for actual
values that must be specified on the command-line.
* Any placeholder that is immediately followed by ... may be repeated
as many times as desired.
* Any whitespace in the structure specifies that any amount of
whitespace (including none) is allowed at the same position on the
command-line.
* A vertical bar indicates the start of an alternative variant of the
argument.
For example, the argument specification:
=item -i[n] [=] <file> | --from <file>
indicates that any of the following may appear on the command-line:
-idata.txt -i data.txt -i=data.txt -i = data.txt
-indata.txt -in data.txt -in=data.txt -in = data.txt
--from data.text
as well as any other combination of whitespacing.
Any of the above variations would cause all three of:
$ARGV{'-i'}
$ARGV{'-in'}
$ARGV{'--from'}
to be set to the string 'data.txt'.
You could allow the optional = to also be an optional colon by
specifying:
=item -i[n] [=|:] <file>
Optional components may also be nested, so you could write:
=item -i[n[put]] [=] <file>
which would allow -i, -in, and -input as synonyms for this argument and
would set all three of $ARGV{'-i'}, $ARGV{'-in'}, and $ARGV{'-input'}
to the supplied file name.
The point of setting every possible variant within %ARGV is that this
allows you to use a single key (say $ARGV{'-input'}, regardless of how
the argument is actually specified on the command-line.
Repeatable arguments
Normally Getopt::Euclid only accepts each specified argument once, the
first time it appears in @ARGV. However, you can specify that an
argument may appear more than once, using the repeatable option:
=item file=<filename>
=for Euclid:
repeatable
When an argument is marked repeatable the corresponding entry of %ARGV
will not contain a single value, but rather an array reference. If the
argument also has "Multiple placeholders", then the corresponding entry
in %ARGV will be an array reference with each array entry being a hash
reference.
Boolean arguments
If an argument has no placeholders it is treated as a boolean switch
and its entry in %ARGV will be true if the argument appeared in @ARGV.
For a boolean argument, you can also specify variations that are false,
if they appear. For example, a common idiom is:
=item --print
Print results
=item --noprint
Do not print results
These two arguments are effectively the same argument, just with
opposite boolean values. However, as specified above, only one of
$ARGV{'--print'} and $ARGV{'--noprint'} will be set.
As an alternative you can specify a single argument that accepts either
value and sets both appropriately:
=item --[no]print
[Do not] print results
=for Euclid:
false: --noprint
With this specification, if --print appears in @ARGV, then
$ARGV{'--print'} will be true and $ARGV{'--noprint'} will be false. On
the other hand, if --noprint appears in @ARGV, then $ARGV{'--print'}
will be false and $ARGV{'--noprint'} will be true.
The specified false values can follow any convention you wish:
=item [+|-]print
=for Euclid:
false: -print
or:
=item -report[_no[t]]
=for Euclid:
false: -report_no[t]
et cetera.
Multiple placeholders
An argument can have two or more placeholders:
=item -size <h> <w>
The corresponding command line argument would then have to provide two
values:
-size 24 80
Multiple placeholders can optionally be separated by literal characters
(which must then appear on the command-line). For example:
=item -size <h>x<w>
would then require a command-line of the form:
-size 24x80
If an argument has two or more placeholders, the corresponding entry in
%ARGV becomes a hash reference, with each of the placeholder names as
one key. That is, the above command-line would set both
$ARGV{'-size'}{'h'} and $ARGV{'-size'}{'w'}.
Optional placeholders
Placeholders can be specified as optional as well:
=item -size <h> [<w>]
This specification then allows either:
-size 24
or:
-size 24 80
on the command-line. If the second placeholder value is not provided,
the corresponding $ARGV{'-size'}{'w'} entry is set to undef. See also
"Placeholder defaults".
Unflagged placeholders
If an argument consists of a single placeholder with no "flag" marking
it:
=item <filename>
then the corresponding entry in %ARG will have a key the same as the
placeholder (including the surrounding angle brackets):
if ($ARGV{'<filename>'} eq '-') {
$fh = \*STDIN;
}
The same is true for any more-complicated arguments that begin with a
placeholder:
=item <h> [x <w>]
The only difference in the more-complex cases is that, if the argument
has any additional placeholders, the entire entry in %ARGV becomes a
hash:
my $total_size
= $ARGV{'<h>'}{'h'} * $ARGV{'<h>'}{'w'}
Note that, as in earlier multi-placeholder examples, the individual
second- level placeholder keys do not retain their angle-brackets.
Repeated placeholders
Any placeholder that is immediately followed by ..., like so:
=item -lib <file>...
=for Euclid:
file.type: readable
will match at least once, but as many times as possible before
encountering the next argument on the command-line. This allows one to
specify multiple values for an argument, for example:
-lib file1.txt file2.txt
An unconstrained repeated unflagged placeholder (see "Placeholder
constraints" and "Unflagged placeholders") will consume the rest of the
command-line, and so should be specified last in the POD
=item -n <name>
=item <offset>...
=for Euclid:
offset.type: 0+int
and on the command-line:
-n foobar 1 5 0 23
If a placeholder is repeated, the corresponding entry in %ARGV will
then be an array reference, with each individual placeholder match in a
separate element. For example:
for my $lib (@{ $ARGV{'-lib'} }) {
add_lib($lib);
}
warn "First offset is: $ARGV{'<offsets>'}[0]";
my $first_offset = shift @{ $ARGV{'<offsets>'} };
Placeholder constraints
You can specify that the value provided for a particular placeholder
must satisfy a particular set of restrictions by using a =for Euclid
block. For example:
=item -size <h>x<w>
=for Euclid:
h.type: integer
w.type: integer
specifies that both the <h> and <w> must be given integers. You can
also specify an operator expression after the type name:
=for Euclid:
h.type: integer > 0
w.type: number <= 100
specifies that <h> has to be given an integer that is greater than
zero, and that <w> has to be given a number (not necessarily an
integer) that is no more than 100.
These type constraints have two alternative syntaxes:
PLACEHOLDER.type: TYPE BINARY_OPERATOR EXPRESSION
as shown above, and the more general:
PLACEHOLDER.type: TYPE [, EXPRESSION_INVOLVING(PLACEHOLDER)]
Using the second syntax, you could write the previous constraints as:
=for Euclid:
h.type: integer, h > 0
w.type: number, w <= 100
In other words, the first syntax is just sugar for the most common case
of the second syntax. The expression can be as complex as you wish and
can refer to the placeholder as many times as necessary:
=for Euclid:
h.type: integer, h > 0 && h < 100
w.type: number, Math::is_prime(w) || w % 2 == 0
Note that the expressions are evaluated in the package main namespace,
so it is important to qualify any subroutines that are not in that
namespace. Furthermore, any subroutines used must be defined (or loaded
from a module) before the use Getopt::Euclid statement.
You can also use constraints that involve variables. You must use the
:defer mode and the variables must be globally accessible:
use Getopt::Euclid qw(:defer);
our $MIN_VAL = 100;
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@ARGV);
__END__
=head1 OPTIONS
=over
=item --magnitude <magnitude>
=for Euclid
magnitude.type: number, magnitude > $MIN_VAL
=back
Standard placeholder types
Getopt::Euclid recognizes the following standard placeholder types:
Name Placeholder value... Synonyms
============ ==================== ================
integer ...must be an integer int i
+integer ...must be a positive +int +i
integer
(same as: integer > 0)
0+integer ...must be a positive 0+int 0+i
integer or zero
(same as: integer >= 0)
number ...must be an number num n
+number ...must be a positive +num +n
number
(same as: number > 0)
0+number ...must be a positive 0+num 0+n
number or zero
(same as: number >= 0)
string ...may be any string str s
(default type)
readable ...must be the name input in
of a readable file
writeable ...must be the name writable output out
of a writeable file
(or of a non-existent
file in a writeable
directory)
/<regex>/ ...must be a string
matching the specified
pattern
Since regular expressions are supported, you can easily match many more
type of strings for placeholders by using the regular expressions
available in Regexp::Common. If you do that, you may want to also use
custom placeholder error messages (see "Placeholder type errors") since
the messages would otherwise not be very informative to users.
use Regexp::Common qw /zip/;
use Getopt::Euclid;
...
=item -p <postcode>
Enter your postcode here
=for Euclid:
postcode.type: /$RE{zip}{France}/
postcode.type.error: <postcode> must be a valid ZIP code
Placeholder type errors
If a command-line argument's placeholder value does not satisify the
specified type, an error message is automatically generated. However,
you can provide your own message instead, using the .type.error
specifier:
=for Euclid:
h.type: integer, h > 0 && h < 100
h.type.error: <h> must be between 0 and 100 (not h)
w.type: number, Math::is_prime(w) || w % 2 == 0
w.type.error: Cannot use w for <w> (must be an even prime number)
Whenever an explicit error message is provided, any occurrence within
the message of the placeholder's unbracketed name is replaced by the
placeholder's value (just as in the type test itself).
Placeholder defaults
You can also specify a default value for any placeholders that are not
given values on the command-line (either because their argument is not
provided at all, or because the placeholder is optional within the
argument). For example:
=item -size <h>[x<w>]
Set the size of the simulation
=for Euclid:
h.default: 24
w.default: 80
This ensures that if no <w> value is supplied:
-size 20
then $ARGV{'-size'}{'w'} is set to 80. Likewise, of the -size argument
is omitted entirely, both $ARGV{'-size'}{'h'} and $ARGV{'-size'}{'w'}
are set to their respective default values
However, Getopt::Euclid also supports a second type of default,
optional defaults, that apply only to flagged, optional placeholders.
For example:
=item --debug [<log_level>]
Set the log level
=for Euclid:
log_level.type: int
log_level.default: 0
log_level.opt_default: 1
This ensures that if the option --debug is not specified, then
$ARGV{'--debug'} is set to 0, the regular default. But if no
<log_level> value is supplied:
--debug
then $ARGV{'--debug'} is set to 1, the optional default.
The default value can be any valid Perl compile-time expression:
=item -pi=<pi value>
=for Euclid:
pi value.default: atan2(0,-1)
You can refer to an argument default or optional default value in its
POD entry as shown below:
=item -size <h>[x<w>]
Set the size of the simulation [default: h.default x w.default]
=for Euclid:
h.default: 24
w.default: 80
=item --debug <level>
Set the debug level. The default is level.default if you supply --debug but
omit a <level> value.
=for Euclid:
level.opt_default: 3
Just like for "Placeholder constraints", you can also use variables to
define default values. You must use the :defer mode and the variables
must be globally accessible:
use Getopt::Euclid qw(:defer);
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@ARGV);
__END__
=head1 OPTIONS
=over
=item --home <home>
Your project home. When omitted, this defaults to the location stored in
the HOME environment variable.
=for Euclid
home.default: $ENV{'HOME'}
=back
Exclusive placeholders
Some arguments can be mutually exclusive. In this case, it is possible
to specify that a placeholder excludes a list of other placeholders,
for example:
=item -height <h>
Set the desired height
=item -width <w>
Set the desired width
=item -volume <v>
Set the desired volume
=for Euclid:
v.excludes: h, w
v.excludes.error: Either set the volume or the height and weight
Specifying both placeholders at the same time on the command-line will
generate an error. Note that the error message can be customized, as
illustrated above.
When using exclusive arguments that have default values, the default
value of the placeholder with the .excludes statement has precedence
over any other placeholders.
Argument cuddling
Getopt::Euclid allows any "flag" argument to be "cuddled". A flag
argument consists of a single non- alphanumeric character, followed by
a single alpha-numeric character:
=item -v
=item -x
=item +1
=item =z
Cuddling means that two or more such arguments can be concatenated
after a single common non-alphanumeric. For example:
-vx
Note, however, that only flags with the same leading non-alphanumeric
can be cuddled together. Getopt::Euclid would not allow:
-vxz
This is because cuddling is recognized by progressively removing the
second character of the cuddle. In other words:
-vxz
becomes:
-v -xz
which becomes:
-v -x z
which will fail, unless a z argument has also been specified.
On the other hand, if the argument:
=item -e <cmd>
had been specified, the module would accept:
-vxe'print time'
as a cuddled version of:
-v -x -e'print time'
Exporting option variables
By default, the module only stores arguments into the global %ARGV
hash. You can request that options are exported as variables into the
calling package using the special ':vars' specifier:
use Getopt::Euclid qw( :vars );
That is, if your program accepts the following arguments:
-v
--mode <modename>
<infile>
<outfile>
--auto-fudge <factor> (repeatable)
--also <a>...
--size <w>x<h>
--multiply <num1>x<num2> (repeatable)
Then these variables will be exported
$ARGV_v
$ARGV_mode
$ARGV_infile
$ARGV_outfile
@ARGV_auto_fudge
@ARGV_also
%ARGV_size # With entries $ARGV_size{w} and $ARGV_size{h}
@ARGV_multiply # With entries that are hashref similar to \%ARGV_size
For options that have multiple variants, only the longest variant is
exported.
The type of variable exported (scalar, hash, or array) is determined by
the type of the corresponding value in %ARGV. Command-line flags and
arguments that take single values will produce scalars, arguments that
take multiple values will produce hashes, and repeatable arguments will
produce arrays.
If you do not like the default prefix of "ARGV_", you can specify your
own, such as "opt_", like this:
use Getopt::Euclid qw( :vars<opt_> );
The major advantage of using exported variables is that any misspelling
of argument variables in your code will be caught at compile-time by
use strict.
Standard arguments
Getopt::Euclid automatically provides four standard arguments to any
program that uses the module. The behaviours of these arguments are
"hard- wired" and cannot be changed, not even by defining your own
arguments of the same name.
The standard arguments are:
--usage usage()
The --usage argument causes the program to print a short usage
summary and exit. The Getopt::Euclid-usage()> subroutine provides
access to the string of this message.
--help help()
The --help argument causes the program to take a longer usage summary
(with a full list of required and optional arguments) provided in POD
format by help(), convert it to plaintext, display it and exit. The
message is paged using IO::Pager::Page (or IO::Page) if possible.
--man man()
The --man argument causes the program to take the POD documentation
for the program, provided by man(), convert it to plaintext, display
it and exit. The message is paged using IO::Pager::Page (or IO::Page)
if possible.
--podfile podfile()
The --podfile argument is provided for authors. It causes the program
to take the POD manual from man(), write it in a .pod file with the
same base name as the program, display the name of the output file
and exit. These actions can also be executed by calling the podfile()
subroutine.This argument is not really a standard argument, but it is
useful if the program's POD is to be passed to a POD converter
because, among other things, any default value specified is
interpolated and replaced by its value in the .pod file, contrary to
in the program's .pl file.
If you want to automate the creation of a POD file during the build
process, you can edit you Makefile.PL or Build.PL file and add these
lines:
my @args = ($^X, '-Ilib', '/path/to/script', '--podfile');
system(@args) == 0 or die "System call to '@args' failed:\n$?\n";
If you use Module::Install to bundle your script, you might be
interested in using Module::Install::PodFromEuclid to include the
--podfile step into the installation process.
--version version()
The --version argument causes the program to print the version number
of the program (as specified in the =head1 VERSION section of the
POD) and any copyright information (as specified in the =head1
COPYRIGHT POD section) and then exit. The Getopt::Euclid-version()>
subroutine provides access to the string of this message.
Minimalist keys
By default, the keys of %ARGV will match the program's interface
exactly. That is, if your program accepts the following arguments:
-v
--mode <modename>
<infile>
<outfile>
--auto-fudge
Then the keys that appear in %ARGV will be:
'-v'
'--mode'
'<infile>'
'<outfile>'
'--auto-fudge'
In some cases, however, it may be preferable to have Getopt::Euclid set
up those hash keys without "decorations". That is, to have the keys of
%ARGV be simply:
'v'
'mode'
'infile'
'outfile'
'auto_fudge'
You can arrange this by loading the module with the special
':minimal_keys' specifier:
use Getopt::Euclid qw( :minimal_keys );
Note that, in rare cases, using this mode may cause you to lose data
(for example, if the interface specifies both a --step and a <step>
option). The module throws an exception if this happens.
Deferring argument parsing
In some instances, you may want to avoid the parsing of arguments to
take place as soon as your program is executed and Getopt::Euclid is
loaded. For example, you may need to examine @ARGV before it is
processed (and emptied) by Getopt::Euclid. Or you may intend to pass
your own arguments manually only using process_args().
To defer the parsing of arguments, use the specifier ':defer':
use Getopt::Euclid qw( :defer );
# Do something...
Getopt::Euclid->process_args(\@ARGV);
DIAGNOSTICS
Compile-time diagnostics
The following diagnostics are mainly caused by problems in the POD
specification of the command-line interface:
Getopt::Euclid was unable to access POD
Something is horribly wrong. Getopt::Euclid was unable to read your
program to extract the POD from it. Check your program's permissions,
though it is a mystery how perl was able to run the program in the
first place, if it is not readable.
.pm file cannot define an explicit import() when using Getopt::Euclid
You tried to define an import() subroutine in a module that was also
using Getopt::Euclid. Since the whole point of using Getopt::Euclid
in a module is to have it build an import() for you, supplying your
own import() as well defeats the purpose.
Unknown specification: %s
You specified something in a =for Euclid section that Getopt::Euclid
did not understand. This is often caused by typos, or by reversing a
placeholder.type or placeholder.default specification (that is,
writing type.placeholder or default.placeholder instead).
Unknown type (%s) in specification: %s
Unknown .type constraint: %s
Both these errors mean that you specified a type constraint that
Getopt::Euclid did not recognize. This may have been a typo:
=for Euclid
count.type: inetger
or else the module simply does not know about the type you specified:
=for Euclid
count.type: complex
See "Standard placeholder types" for a list of types that
Getopt::Euclid does recognize.
Invalid .type constraint: %s
You specified a type constraint that is not valid Perl. For example:
=for Euclid
max.type: integer not equals 0
instead of:
=for Euclid
max.type: integer != 0
Invalid .default value: %s
You specified a default value that is not valid Perl. For example:
=for Euclid
curse.default: *$@!&
instead of:
=for Euclid
curse.default: '*$@!&'
Invalid .opt_default value: %s
Same as previous diagnostic, but for optional defaults.
Invalid reference to field %s.default in argument description: %s
You referred to a default value in the description of an argument,
but there is no such default. It may be a typo, or you may be
referring to the default value for a different argument, e.g.:
=item -a <age>
An optional age. Default: years.default
=for Euclid
age.default: 21
instead of:
=item -a <age>
An optional age. Default: age.default
=for Euclid
age.default: 21
Invalid reference to field %s.opt_default in argument description: %s
Same as previous diagnostic, but for optional defaults.
Invalid .opt_default constraint: Placeholder <%s> must be optional
You specified an optional default but the placeholder that it affects
is not an optional placeholder. For example:
=item -l[[en][gth]] <l>
=for Euclid:
l.opt_default: 123
instead of:
=item -l[[en][gth]] [<l>]
=for Euclid:
l.opt_default: 123
Invalid .opt_default constraint: Parameter %s must have a flag
You specified an optional default but the parameter that it affects
is unflagged. For example:
=item <length>
=for Euclid:
l.opt_default: 123
instead of:
=item -l [<length>]
=for Euclid:
l.opt_default: 123
Invalid .excludes value for variable %s: <%s> does not exist
You specified to exclude a variable that was not seen in the POD.
Make sure that this is not a typo.
Invalid constraint: %s (No <%s> placeholder in argument: %s)
You attempted to define a .type constraint for a placeholder that did
not exist. Typically this is the result of the misspelling of a
placeholder name:
=item -foo <bar>
=for Euclid:
baz.type: integer
or a =for Euclid: that has drifted away from its argument:
=item -foo <bar>
=item -verbose
=for Euclid:
bar.type: integer
Getopt::Euclid loaded a second time
You tried to load the module twice in the same program.
Getopt::Euclid does not work that way. Load it only once.
Unknown mode ('%s')
The only argument that a use Getopt::Euclid command accepts is
':minimal_keys' (see "Minimalist keys"). You specified something else
instead (or possibly forgot to put a semicolon after use
Getopt::Euclid).
Internal error: minimalist mode caused arguments '%s' and '%s' to clash
Minimalist mode removes certain characters from the keys hat are
returned in %ARGV. This can mean that two command-line options (such
as --step and <step>) map to the same key (i.e. 'step'). This in turn
means that one of the two options has overwritten the other within
the %ARGV hash. The program developer should either turn off
':minimal_keys' mode within the program, or else change the name of
one of the options so that the two no longer clash.
Run-time diagnostics
The following diagnostics are caused by problems in parsing the
command-line
Missing required argument(s): %s
At least one argument specified in the REQUIRED ARGUMENTS POD section
was not present on the command-line.
Invalid %s argument. %s must be %s but the supplied value (%s) is not.
Getopt::Euclid recognized the argument you were trying to specify on
the command-line, but the value you gave to one of that argument's
placeholders was of the wrong type.
Unknown argument: %s
Getopt::Euclid did not recognize an argument you were trying to
specify on the command-line. This is often caused by command-line
typos or an incomplete interface specification.
CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT
Getopt::Euclid requires no configuration files or environment
variables.
DEPENDENCIES
* version
* Pod::Select
* Pod::PlainText
* File::Basename
* File::Spec::Functions
* List::Util
* Text::Balanced
* IO::Pager::Page (recommended)
INCOMPATIBILITIES
Getopt::Euclid may not work properly with POD in Perl files that have
been converted into an executable with PerlApp or similar software. A
possible workaround may be to move the POD to a __DATA__ section or a
separate .pod file.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Please report any bugs or feature requests via GitHub issues
<https://github.com/bigpresh/Getopt-Euclid/issues>
Pull requests to fix bugs / add features welcome!
GitHub repo <https://github.com/bigpresh/Getopt-Euclid>
git clone git@github.com:bigpresh/Getopt-Euclid.git
The RT queue
<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Getopt-Euclid> still
exists but GitHub issues are preferred due to their integration with
pull requests etc.
AUTHOR
Damian Conway <DCONWAY@cpan.org>
Florent Angly <florent.angly@gmail.com>
David Precious (BIGPRESH) <davidp@preshweb.co.uk>
LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2005, Damian Conway <DCONWAY@cpan.org>. All rights
reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY
BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT
WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER
PARTIES PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH
YOU. SHOULD THE SOFTWARE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL
NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.
IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
REDISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE AS PERMITTED BY THE ABOVE LICENCE, BE LIABLE
TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE
SOFTWARE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A
FAILURE OF THE SOFTWARE TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF
SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGES.
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