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Diffstat (limited to 'parse.go')
| -rw-r--r-- | parse.go | 34 |
1 files changed, 34 insertions, 0 deletions
@@ -1,3 +1,37 @@ +// Package arg parses command line arguments using the fields from a struct. +// Any exported field is interpreted as a command line option, so +// +// var args struct { +// Iter int +// Debug bool +// } +// arg.MustParse(&args) +// +// defines two command line arguments, which can be set using any of +// +// ./example --iter=1 --bar // bar is a boolean flag so its value is optional +// ./example -iter 1 // bar will default to its zero value +// ./example --bar=true // foo will default to its zero value +// +// The fastest way to learn how to use go-arg is to read the examples below. +// +// Fields can be bool, string, any float type, or any signed or unsigned integer type. +// They can also be slices of any of the above, or slices of pointers to any of the above. +// +// Tags can be specified using the `arg` package name: +// +// var args struct { +// Input string `arg:"positional"` +// Log string `arg:"positional,required"` +// Debug bool `arg:"-d,help:turn on debug mode"` +// RealMode bool `arg:"--real" +// Wr io.Writer `arg:"-"` +// } +// +// The valid tag strings are `positional`, `required`, and `help`. Further, any tag string +// that starts with a single hyphen is the short form for an argument (e.g. `./example -d`), +// and any tag string that starts with two hyphens is the long form for the argument +// (instead of the field name). Fields can be excluded from processing with `arg:"-"`. package arg import ( |
