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author | Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org> | 1997-02-17 00:19:41 +0000 |
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committer | Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org> | 1997-02-17 00:19:41 +0000 |
commit | cd8cdaf993ed63e54b94fc12b0d902cdca058cd7 (patch) | |
tree | 321ec47878bbccc49396996bba62eb238ec60abf /libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c | |
parent | 333bc1511260fff854219bf05e888611218a2f46 (diff) |
Initial checkin
Diffstat (limited to 'libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c')
-rw-r--r-- | libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c | 146 |
1 files changed, 146 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c b/libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000..13ad0983 --- /dev/null +++ b/libshouldbeinlibc/argp-ex4.c @@ -0,0 +1,146 @@ +/* Argp example #4 -- a program with somewhat more complicated options */ + +/* This program uses the same features as example 3, but has more options, + and somewhat more structure in the -help output. It also shows how you + can `steal' the remainder of the input arguments past a certain point, for + programs that accept a list of items. It also shows the special argp KEY + value ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS, which is only given if no non-option arguments + were supplied to the program. + + For structuring the help output, two features are used, *headers* which + are entries in the options vector with the first four fields being zero, + and a two part documentation string (in the variable DOC), which allows + documentation both before and after the options; the two parts of DOC are + separated by a vertical-tab character ('\v', or '\013'). By convention, + the documentation before the options is just a short string saying what + the program does, and that afterwards is longer, describing the behavior + in more detail. All documentation strings are automatically filled for + output, although newlines may be included to force a line break at a + particular point. All documenation strings are also passed to the + `gettext' function, for possible translation into the current locale. */ + +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <error.h> +#include <argp.h> + +char *argp_program_version = "argp-ex4 1.0"; +char *argp_program_bug_address = "<bug-gnu-utils@prep.ai.mit.edu>"; + +static char doc[] = + "Argp example #4 -- a program with somewhat more complicated options\ +\vThis part of the documentation comes *after* the options; note that\ + it is automatically filled, but it's possible to force a line-break,\ + e.g.\n<-- here."; +static char args_doc[] = "ARG1 [STRING...]"; + +/* Keys for options without short-options. */ +#define OPT_ABORT 1 /* --abort */ + +static struct argp_option options[] = { + {"verbose", 'v', 0, 0, "Produce verbose output" }, + {"quiet", 'q', 0, 0, "Don't produce any output" }, + {"silent", 's', 0, OPTION_ALIAS }, + {"output", 'o', "FILE", 0, "Output to FILE instead of standard output" }, + + {0, 0, 0, 0, "The following options should be grouped together:" }, + {"repeat", 'r', "COUNT", OPTION_ARG_OPTIONAL, + "Repeat the output COUNT (default 10) times"}, + {"abort", OPT_ABORT, 0, 0, "Abort before showing any output"}, + { 0 } +}; + +/* Used by main to communicate with parse_opt. */ +struct arguments +{ + char *arg1; /* ARG1 */ + char **strings; /* [STRING...] */ + int silent, verbose, abort; /* -s, -v, --abort */ + char *output_file; /* --output=FILE */ + int repeat_count; /* --repeat[=COUNT] */ +}; + +static error_t +parse_opt (int key, char *arg, struct argp_state *state) +{ + /* Get the INPUT argument from argp_parse, which we know is a pointer to + our arguments structure. */ + struct arguments *arguments = state->input; + + switch (key) + { + case 'q': case 's': + arguments->silent = 1; + break; + case 'v': + arguments->verbose = 1; + break; + case 'o': + arguments->output_file = arg; + break; + case 'r': + arguments->repeat_count = arg ? atoi (arg) : 10; + break; + case OPT_ABORT: + arguments->abort = 1; + break; + + case ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS: + argp_usage (state); + + case ARGP_KEY_ARG: + /* Here we know that STATE->arg_num == 0, since we force argument + parsing to end before any more arguments can get here. */ + arguments->arg1 = arg; + + /* Now we consume all the rest of the arguments. STATE->next is the + index in STATE->argv of the next argument to be parsed, which is the + first STRING we're interested in, so we can just use + `&state->argv[state->next]' as the value for arguments->strings. + + IN ADDITION, by setting STATE->next to the end of the arguments, we + can force argp to stop parsing here and return. */ + arguments->strings = &state->argv[state->next]; + state->next = state->argc; + + break; + + default: + return ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN; + } + return 0; +} + +static struct argp argp = { options, parse_opt, args_doc, doc }; + +int main (int argc, char **argv) +{ + int i, j; + struct arguments arguments; + + /* Default values. */ + arguments.silent = 0; + arguments.verbose = 0; + arguments.output_file = "-"; + arguments.repeat_count = 1; + arguments.abort = 0; + + argp_parse (&argp, argc, argv, 0, 0, &arguments); + + if (arguments.abort) + error (10, 0, "ABORTED"); + + for (i = 0; i < arguments.repeat_count; i++) + { + printf ("ARG1 = %s\n", arguments.arg1); + printf ("STRINGS = "); + for (j = 0; arguments.strings[j]; j++) + printf (j == 0 ? "%s" : ", %s", arguments.strings[j]); + printf ("\n"); + printf ("OUTPUT_FILE = %s\nVERBOSE = %s\nSILENT = %s\n", + arguments.output_file, + arguments.verbose ? "yes" : "no", + arguments.silent ? "yes" : "no"); + } + + exit (0); +} |