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Polyfill of util.parseArgs()
util.parseArgs([config])Stability: 1 - Experimental
config {Object} Used to provide arguments for parsing and to configure
the parser. config supports the following properties:
args {string[]} array of argument strings. Default: process.argv
with execPath and filename removed.options {Object} Used to describe arguments known to the parser.
Keys of options are the long names of options and values are an
{Object} accepting the following properties:type {string} Type of argument, which must be either boolean or string.multiple {boolean} Whether this option can be provided multiple
times. If true, all values will be collected in an array. If
false, values for the option are last-wins. Default: false.short {string} A single character alias for the option.default {string | boolean | string[] | boolean[]} The default option
value when it is not set by args. It must be of the same type as the
the type property. When multiple is true, it must be an array.strict {boolean} Should an error be thrown when unknown arguments
are encountered, or when arguments are passed that do not match the
type configured in options.
Default: true.allowPositionals {boolean} Whether this command accepts positional
arguments.
Default: false if strict is true, otherwise true.tokens {boolean} Return the parsed tokens. This is useful for extending
the built-in behavior, from adding additional checks through to reprocessing
the tokens in different ways.
Default: false.Returns: {Object} The parsed command line arguments:
values {Object} A mapping of parsed option names with their {string}
or {boolean} values.positionals {string[]} Positional arguments.tokens {Object[] | undefined} See parseArgs tokens
section. Only returned if config includes tokens: true.Provides a higher level API for command-line argument parsing than interacting
with process.argv directly. Takes a specification for the expected arguments
and returns a structured object with the parsed options and positionals.
import { parseArgs } from 'node:util';
const args = ['-f', '--bar', 'b'];
const options = {
foo: {
type: 'boolean',
short: 'f'
},
bar: {
type: 'string'
}
};
const {
values,
positionals
} = parseArgs({ args, options });
console.log(values, positionals);
// Prints: [Object: null prototype] { foo: true, bar: 'b' } []
const { parseArgs } = require('node:util');
const args = ['-f', '--bar', 'b'];
const options = {
foo: {
type: 'boolean',
short: 'f'
},
bar: {
type: 'string'
}
};
const {
values,
positionals
} = parseArgs({ args, options });
console.log(values, positionals);
// Prints: [Object: null prototype] { foo: true, bar: 'b' } []
util.parseArgs is experimental and behavior may change. Join the
conversation in pkgjs/parseargs to contribute to the design.
parseArgs tokensDetailed parse information is available for adding custom behaviours by
specifying tokens: true in the configuration.
The returned tokens have properties describing:
kind {string} One of 'option', 'positional', or 'option-terminator'.index {number} Index of element in args containing token. So the
source argument for a token is args[token.index].name {string} Long name of option.rawName {string} How option used in args, like -f of --foo.value {string | undefined} Option value specified in args.
Undefined for boolean options.inlineValue {boolean | undefined} Whether option value specified inline,
like --foo=bar.value {string} The value of the positional argument in args (i.e. args[index]).The returned tokens are in the order encountered in the input args. Options
that appear more than once in args produce a token for each use. Short option
groups like -xy expand to a token for each option. So -xxx produces
three tokens.
For example to use the returned tokens to add support for a negated option
like --no-color, the tokens can be reprocessed to change the value stored
for the negated option.
import { parseArgs } from 'node:util';
const options = {
'color': { type: 'boolean' },
'no-color': { type: 'boolean' },
'logfile': { type: 'string' },
'no-logfile': { type: 'boolean' },
};
const { values, tokens } = parseArgs({ options, tokens: true });
// Reprocess the option tokens and overwrite the returned values.
tokens
.filter((token) => token.kind === 'option')
.forEach((token) => {
if (token.name.startsWith('no-')) {
// Store foo:false for --no-foo
const positiveName = token.name.slice(3);
values[positiveName] = false;
delete values[token.name];
} else {
// Resave value so last one wins if both --foo and --no-foo.
values[token.name] = token.value ?? true;
}
});
const color = values.color;
const logfile = values.logfile ?? 'default.log';
console.log({ logfile, color });
const { parseArgs } = require('node:util');
const options = {
'color': { type: 'boolean' },
'no-color': { type: 'boolean' },
'logfile': { type: 'string' },
'no-logfile': { type: 'boolean' },
};
const { values, tokens } = parseArgs({ options, tokens: true });
// Reprocess the option tokens and overwrite the returned values.
tokens
.filter((token) => token.kind === 'option')
.forEach((token) => {
if (token.name.startsWith('no-')) {
// Store foo:false for --no-foo
const positiveName = token.name.slice(3);
values[positiveName] = false;
delete values[token.name];
} else {
// Resave value so last one wins if both --foo and --no-foo.
values[token.name] = token.value ?? true;
}
});
const color = values.color;
const logfile = values.logfile ?? 'default.log';
console.log({ logfile, color });
Example usage showing negated options, and when an option is used multiple ways then last one wins.
$ node negate.js
{ logfile: 'default.log', color: undefined }
$ node negate.js --no-logfile --no-color
{ logfile: false, color: false }
$ node negate.js --logfile=test.log --color
{ logfile: 'test.log', color: true }
$ node negate.js --no-logfile --logfile=test.log --color --no-color
{ logfile: 'test.log', color: false }
util.parseArgs([config])process.mainArgs Proposal
It is already possible to build great arg parsing modules on top of what Node.js provides; the prickly API is abstracted away by these modules. Thus, process.parseArgs() is not necessarily intended for library authors; it is intended for developers of simple CLI tools, ad-hoc scripts, deployed Node.js applications, and learning materials.
It is exceedingly difficult to provide an API which would both be friendly to these Node.js users while being extensible enough for libraries to build upon. We chose to prioritize these use cases because these are currently not well-served by Node.js' API.
| Node.js | @pkgjs/parseArgs | | -- | -- | | v18.3.0 | v0.9.1 | | v16.17.0, v18.7.0 | 0.10.0 |
Install dependencies.
npm install
Open the index.js file and start editing!
Test your code by calling parseArgs through our test file
npm test
Any person who wants to contribute to the initiative is welcome! Please first read the Contributing Guide
Additionally, reading the Examples w/ Output section of this document will be the best way to familiarize yourself with the target expected behavior for parseArgs() once it is fully implemented.
This package was implemented using tape as its test harness.
process.mainArgs ProposalNote: This can be moved forward independently of the
util.parseArgs()proposal/work.
process.mainArgs = process.argv.slice(process._exec ? 1 : 2)
const { parseArgs } = require('@pkgjs/parseargs');
const { parseArgs } = require('@pkgjs/parseargs');
// specify the options that may be used
const options = {
foo: { type: 'string'},
bar: { type: 'boolean' },
};
const args = ['--foo=a', '--bar'];
const { values, positionals } = parseArgs({ args, options });
// values = { foo: 'a', bar: true }
// positionals = []
const { parseArgs } = require('@pkgjs/parseargs');
// type:string & multiple
const options = {
foo: {
type: 'string',
multiple: true,
},
};
const args = ['--foo=a', '--foo', 'b'];
const { values, positionals } = parseArgs({ args, options });
// values = { foo: [ 'a', 'b' ] }
// positionals = []
const { parseArgs } = require('@pkgjs/parseargs');
// shorts
const options = {
foo: {
short: 'f',
type: 'boolean'
},
};
const args = ['-f', 'b'];
const { values, positionals } = parseArgs({ args, options, allowPositionals: true });
// values = { foo: true }
// positionals = ['b']
const { parseArgs } = require('@pkgjs/parseargs');
// unconfigured
const options = {};
const args = ['-f', '--foo=a', '--bar', 'b'];
const { values, positionals } = parseArgs({ strict: false, args, options, allowPositionals: true });
// values = { f: true, foo: 'a', bar: true }
// positionals = ['b']
cmd --foo=bar baz the same as cmd baz --foo=bar?
usage: ls [-ABCFGHLOPRSTUWabcdefghiklmnopqrstuwx1] [file ...]
cmd --help?
process.exitCode?
type: path to call path.resolve() on the argument.)
--foo=0o22 mean 0, 22, 18, or "0o22"?
"0o22"--no-foo coerce to --foo=false? For all options? Only boolean options?
{values:{'no-foo': true}}--foo the same as --foo=true? Only for known booleans? Only at the end?
true as a value so it is just another string.FOO=1 cmd the same as cmd --foo=1?
-- signal the end of options?
-- included as a positional?
program -- foo the same as program foo?
{positionals:['foo']}-- was present/relevant?
-bar the same as --bar?
-bar is a short option or options, with expansion logic that follows the
Utility Syntax Guidelines in POSIX.1-2017. -bar expands to -b, -a, -r.---foo the same as --foo?
'-foo''foo'- a positional? ie, bash some-test.sh | tap -