diff options
author | Robin Krahl <robin.krahl@ireas.org> | 2020-01-07 11:18:04 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Daniel Mueller <deso@posteo.net> | 2020-01-08 09:20:25 -0800 |
commit | 5e20a29b4fdc8a2d442d1093681b396dcb4b816b (patch) | |
tree | 55ab083fa8999d2ccbb5e921c1ffe52560dca152 /clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs | |
parent | 203e691f46d591a2cc8acdfd850fa9f5b0fb8a98 (diff) | |
download | nitrocli-5e20a29b4fdc8a2d442d1093681b396dcb4b816b.tar.gz nitrocli-5e20a29b4fdc8a2d442d1093681b396dcb4b816b.tar.bz2 |
Add structopt dependency in version 0.3.7
This patch series replaces argparse with structopt in the argument
handling code. As a first step, we need structopt as a dependency.
Import subrepo structopt/:structopt at efbdda4753592e27bc430fb01f7b9650b2f3174d
Import subrepo bitflags/:bitflags at 30668016aca6bd3b02c766e8347e0b4080d4c296
Import subrepo clap/:clap at 784524f7eb193e35f81082cc69454c8c21b948f7
Import subrepo heck/:heck at 093d56fbf001e1506e56dbfa38631d99b1066df1
Import subrepo proc-macro-error/:proc-macro-error at 6c4cfe79a622c5de8ae68557993542be46eacae2
Import subrepo proc-macro2/:proc-macro2 at d5d48eddca4566e5438e8a2cbed4a74e049544de
Import subrepo quote/:quote at 727436c6c137b20f0f34dde5d8fda2679b9747ad
Import subrepo rustversion/:rustversion at 0c5663313516263059ce9059ef81fc7a1cf655ca
Import subrepo syn-mid/:syn-mid at 5d3d85414a9e6674e1857ec22a87b96e04a6851a
Import subrepo syn/:syn at e87c27e87f6f4ef8919d0372bdb056d53ef0d8f3
Import subrepo textwrap/:textwrap at abcd618beae3f74841032aa5b53c1086b0a57ca2
Import subrepo unicode-segmentation/:unicode-segmentation at 637c9874c4fe0c205ff27787faf150a40295c6c3
Import subrepo unicode-width/:unicode-width at 3033826f8bf05e82724140a981d5941e48fce393
Import subrepo unicode-xid/:unicode-xid at 4baae9fffb156ba229665b972a9cd5991787ceb7
Diffstat (limited to 'clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs')
-rw-r--r-- | clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs | 963 |
1 files changed, 963 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs b/clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6cf70a4 --- /dev/null +++ b/clap/src/args/arg_matches.rs @@ -0,0 +1,963 @@ +// Std +use std::borrow::Cow; +use std::collections::HashMap; +use std::ffi::{OsStr, OsString}; +use std::iter::Map; +use std::slice::Iter; + +// Internal +use INVALID_UTF8; +use args::MatchedArg; +use args::SubCommand; + +/// Used to get information about the arguments that where supplied to the program at runtime by +/// the user. New instances of this struct are obtained by using the [`App::get_matches`] family of +/// methods. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// # use clap::{App, Arg}; +/// let matches = App::new("MyApp") +/// .arg(Arg::with_name("out") +/// .long("output") +/// .required(true) +/// .takes_value(true)) +/// .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") +/// .short("d") +/// .multiple(true)) +/// .arg(Arg::with_name("cfg") +/// .short("c") +/// .takes_value(true)) +/// .get_matches(); // builds the instance of ArgMatches +/// +/// // to get information about the "cfg" argument we created, such as the value supplied we use +/// // various ArgMatches methods, such as ArgMatches::value_of +/// if let Some(c) = matches.value_of("cfg") { +/// println!("Value for -c: {}", c); +/// } +/// +/// // The ArgMatches::value_of method returns an Option because the user may not have supplied +/// // that argument at runtime. But if we specified that the argument was "required" as we did +/// // with the "out" argument, we can safely unwrap because `clap` verifies that was actually +/// // used at runtime. +/// println!("Value for --output: {}", matches.value_of("out").unwrap()); +/// +/// // You can check the presence of an argument +/// if matches.is_present("out") { +/// // Another way to check if an argument was present, or if it occurred multiple times is to +/// // use occurrences_of() which returns 0 if an argument isn't found at runtime, or the +/// // number of times that it occurred, if it was. To allow an argument to appear more than +/// // once, you must use the .multiple(true) method, otherwise it will only return 1 or 0. +/// if matches.occurrences_of("debug") > 2 { +/// println!("Debug mode is REALLY on, don't be crazy"); +/// } else { +/// println!("Debug mode kind of on"); +/// } +/// } +/// ``` +/// [`App::get_matches`]: ./struct.App.html#method.get_matches +#[derive(Debug, Clone)] +pub struct ArgMatches<'a> { + #[doc(hidden)] pub args: HashMap<&'a str, MatchedArg>, + #[doc(hidden)] pub subcommand: Option<Box<SubCommand<'a>>>, + #[doc(hidden)] pub usage: Option<String>, +} + +impl<'a> Default for ArgMatches<'a> { + fn default() -> Self { + ArgMatches { + args: HashMap::new(), + subcommand: None, + usage: None, + } + } +} + +impl<'a> ArgMatches<'a> { + #[doc(hidden)] + pub fn new() -> Self { + ArgMatches { + ..Default::default() + } + } + + /// Gets the value of a specific [option] or [positional] argument (i.e. an argument that takes + /// an additional value at runtime). If the option wasn't present at runtime + /// it returns `None`. + /// + /// *NOTE:* If getting a value for an option or positional argument that allows multiples, + /// prefer [`ArgMatches::values_of`] as `ArgMatches::value_of` will only return the *first* + /// value. + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This method will [`panic!`] if the value contains invalid UTF-8 code points. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("output") + /// .takes_value(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "something"]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.value_of("output"), Some("something")); + /// ``` + /// [option]: ./struct.Arg.html#method.takes_value + /// [positional]: ./struct.Arg.html#method.index + /// [`ArgMatches::values_of`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.values_of + /// [`panic!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.panic!.html + pub fn value_of<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> Option<&str> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + if let Some(v) = arg.vals.get(0) { + return Some(v.to_str().expect(INVALID_UTF8)); + } + } + None + } + + /// Gets the lossy value of a specific argument. If the argument wasn't present at runtime + /// it returns `None`. A lossy value is one which contains invalid UTF-8 code points, those + /// invalid points will be replaced with `\u{FFFD}` + /// + /// *NOTE:* If getting a value for an option or positional argument that allows multiples, + /// prefer [`Arg::values_of_lossy`] as `value_of_lossy()` will only return the *first* value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + #[cfg_attr(not(unix), doc = " ```ignore")] + #[cfg_attr(unix, doc = " ```")] + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// use std::ffi::OsString; + /// use std::os::unix::ffi::{OsStrExt,OsStringExt}; + /// + /// let m = App::new("utf8") + /// .arg(Arg::from_usage("<arg> 'some arg'")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), + /// // "Hi {0xe9}!" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![b'H', b'i', b' ', 0xe9, b'!'])]); + /// assert_eq!(&*m.value_of_lossy("arg").unwrap(), "Hi \u{FFFD}!"); + /// ``` + /// [`Arg::values_of_lossy`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.values_of_lossy + pub fn value_of_lossy<S: AsRef<str>>(&'a self, name: S) -> Option<Cow<'a, str>> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + if let Some(v) = arg.vals.get(0) { + return Some(v.to_string_lossy()); + } + } + None + } + + /// Gets the OS version of a string value of a specific argument. If the option wasn't present + /// at runtime it returns `None`. An OS value on Unix-like systems is any series of bytes, + /// regardless of whether or not they contain valid UTF-8 code points. Since [`String`]s in + /// Rust are guaranteed to be valid UTF-8, a valid filename on a Unix system as an argument + /// value may contain invalid UTF-8 code points. + /// + /// *NOTE:* If getting a value for an option or positional argument that allows multiples, + /// prefer [`ArgMatches::values_of_os`] as `Arg::value_of_os` will only return the *first* + /// value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + #[cfg_attr(not(unix), doc = " ```ignore")] + #[cfg_attr(unix, doc = " ```")] + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// use std::ffi::OsString; + /// use std::os::unix::ffi::{OsStrExt,OsStringExt}; + /// + /// let m = App::new("utf8") + /// .arg(Arg::from_usage("<arg> 'some arg'")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), + /// // "Hi {0xe9}!" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![b'H', b'i', b' ', 0xe9, b'!'])]); + /// assert_eq!(&*m.value_of_os("arg").unwrap().as_bytes(), [b'H', b'i', b' ', 0xe9, b'!']); + /// ``` + /// [`String`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html + /// [`ArgMatches::values_of_os`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.values_of_os + pub fn value_of_os<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> Option<&OsStr> { + self.args + .get(name.as_ref()) + .and_then(|arg| arg.vals.get(0).map(|v| v.as_os_str())) + } + + /// Gets a [`Values`] struct which implements [`Iterator`] for values of a specific argument + /// (i.e. an argument that takes multiple values at runtime). If the option wasn't present at + /// runtime it returns `None` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This method will panic if any of the values contain invalid UTF-8 code points. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myprog") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("output") + /// .multiple(true) + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "-o", "val1", "val2", "val3" + /// ]); + /// let vals: Vec<&str> = m.values_of("output").unwrap().collect(); + /// assert_eq!(vals, ["val1", "val2", "val3"]); + /// ``` + /// [`Values`]: ./struct.Values.html + /// [`Iterator`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html + pub fn values_of<S: AsRef<str>>(&'a self, name: S) -> Option<Values<'a>> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + fn to_str_slice(o: &OsString) -> &str { o.to_str().expect(INVALID_UTF8) } + let to_str_slice: fn(&OsString) -> &str = to_str_slice; // coerce to fn pointer + return Some(Values { + iter: arg.vals.iter().map(to_str_slice), + }); + } + None + } + + /// Gets the lossy values of a specific argument. If the option wasn't present at runtime + /// it returns `None`. A lossy value is one where if it contains invalid UTF-8 code points, + /// those invalid points will be replaced with `\u{FFFD}` + /// + /// # Examples + /// + #[cfg_attr(not(unix), doc = " ```ignore")] + #[cfg_attr(unix, doc = " ```")] + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// use std::ffi::OsString; + /// use std::os::unix::ffi::OsStringExt; + /// + /// let m = App::new("utf8") + /// .arg(Arg::from_usage("<arg>... 'some arg'")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), + /// // "Hi" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![b'H', b'i']), + /// // "{0xe9}!" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![0xe9, b'!'])]); + /// let mut itr = m.values_of_lossy("arg").unwrap().into_iter(); + /// assert_eq!(&itr.next().unwrap()[..], "Hi"); + /// assert_eq!(&itr.next().unwrap()[..], "\u{FFFD}!"); + /// assert_eq!(itr.next(), None); + /// ``` + pub fn values_of_lossy<S: AsRef<str>>(&'a self, name: S) -> Option<Vec<String>> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + return Some( + arg.vals + .iter() + .map(|v| v.to_string_lossy().into_owned()) + .collect(), + ); + } + None + } + + /// Gets a [`OsValues`] struct which is implements [`Iterator`] for [`OsString`] values of a + /// specific argument. If the option wasn't present at runtime it returns `None`. An OS value + /// on Unix-like systems is any series of bytes, regardless of whether or not they contain + /// valid UTF-8 code points. Since [`String`]s in Rust are guaranteed to be valid UTF-8, a valid + /// filename as an argument value on Linux (for example) may contain invalid UTF-8 code points. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + #[cfg_attr(not(unix), doc = " ```ignore")] + #[cfg_attr(unix, doc = " ```")] + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// use std::ffi::{OsStr,OsString}; + /// use std::os::unix::ffi::{OsStrExt,OsStringExt}; + /// + /// let m = App::new("utf8") + /// .arg(Arg::from_usage("<arg>... 'some arg'")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), + /// // "Hi" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![b'H', b'i']), + /// // "{0xe9}!" + /// OsString::from_vec(vec![0xe9, b'!'])]); + /// + /// let mut itr = m.values_of_os("arg").unwrap().into_iter(); + /// assert_eq!(itr.next(), Some(OsStr::new("Hi"))); + /// assert_eq!(itr.next(), Some(OsStr::from_bytes(&[0xe9, b'!']))); + /// assert_eq!(itr.next(), None); + /// ``` + /// [`OsValues`]: ./struct.OsValues.html + /// [`Iterator`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html + /// [`OsString`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsString.html + /// [`String`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html + pub fn values_of_os<S: AsRef<str>>(&'a self, name: S) -> Option<OsValues<'a>> { + fn to_str_slice(o: &OsString) -> &OsStr { &*o } + let to_str_slice: fn(&'a OsString) -> &'a OsStr = to_str_slice; // coerce to fn pointer + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + return Some(OsValues { + iter: arg.vals.iter().map(to_str_slice), + }); + } + None + } + + /// Returns `true` if an argument was present at runtime, otherwise `false`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myprog") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") + /// .short("d")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "-d" + /// ]); + /// + /// assert!(m.is_present("debug")); + /// ``` + pub fn is_present<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> bool { + if let Some(ref sc) = self.subcommand { + if sc.name == name.as_ref() { + return true; + } + } + self.args.contains_key(name.as_ref()) + } + + /// Returns the number of times an argument was used at runtime. If an argument isn't present + /// it will return `0`. + /// + /// **NOTE:** This returns the number of times the argument was used, *not* the number of + /// values. For example, `-o val1 val2 val3 -o val4` would return `2` (2 occurrences, but 4 + /// values). + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myprog") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") + /// .short("d") + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "-d", "-d", "-d" + /// ]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.occurrences_of("debug"), 3); + /// ``` + /// + /// This next example shows that counts actual uses of the argument, not just `-`'s + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myprog") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") + /// .short("d") + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f")) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "-ddfd" + /// ]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.occurrences_of("debug"), 3); + /// assert_eq!(m.occurrences_of("flag"), 1); + /// ``` + pub fn occurrences_of<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> u64 { + self.args.get(name.as_ref()).map_or(0, |a| a.occurs) + } + + /// Gets the starting index of the argument in respect to all other arguments. Indices are + /// similar to argv indices, but are not exactly 1:1. + /// + /// For flags (i.e. those arguments which don't have an associated value), indices refer + /// to occurrence of the switch, such as `-f`, or `--flag`. However, for options the indices + /// refer to the *values* `-o val` would therefore not represent two distinct indices, only the + /// index for `val` would be recorded. This is by design. + /// + /// Besides the flag/option descrepancy, the primary difference between an argv index and clap + /// index, is that clap continues counting once all arguments have properly seperated, whereas + /// an argv index does not. + /// + /// The examples should clear this up. + /// + /// *NOTE:* If an argument is allowed multiple times, this method will only give the *first* + /// index. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// The argv indices are listed in the comments below. See how they correspond to the clap + /// indices. Note that if it's not listed in a clap index, this is becuase it's not saved in + /// in an `ArgMatches` struct for querying. + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-f", "-o", "val"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 + /// // clap idices: ^1 ^3 + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag"), Some(1)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("option"), Some(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// Now notice, if we use one of the other styles of options: + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-f", "-o=val"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 ^2 + /// // clap idices: ^1 ^3 + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag"), Some(1)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("option"), Some(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// Things become much more complicated, or clear if we look at a more complex combination of + /// flags. Let's also throw in the final option style for good measure. + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag2") + /// .short("F")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag3") + /// .short("z")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-fzF", "-oval"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 ^2 + /// // clap idices: ^1,2,3 ^5 + /// // + /// // clap sees the above as 'myapp -f -z -F -o val' + /// // ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 ^4 ^5 + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag"), Some(1)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag2"), Some(3)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag3"), Some(2)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("option"), Some(5)); + /// ``` + /// + /// One final combination of flags/options to see how they combine: + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag2") + /// .short("F")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag3") + /// .short("z")) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true) + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-fzFoval"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 + /// // clap idices: ^1,2,3^5 + /// // + /// // clap sees the above as 'myapp -f -z -F -o val' + /// // ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 ^4 ^5 + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag"), Some(1)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag2"), Some(3)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("flag3"), Some(2)); + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("option"), Some(5)); + /// ``` + /// + /// The last part to mention is when values are sent in multiple groups with a [delimiter]. + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true) + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o=val1,val2,val3"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 + /// // clap idices: ^2 ^3 ^4 + /// // + /// // clap sees the above as 'myapp -o val1 val2 val3' + /// // ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 ^4 + /// assert_eq!(m.index_of("option"), Some(2)); + /// ``` + /// [`ArgMatches`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html + /// [delimiter]: ./struct.Arg.html#method.value_delimiter + pub fn index_of<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> Option<usize> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + if let Some(i) = arg.indices.get(0) { + return Some(*i); + } + } + None + } + + /// Gets all indices of the argument in respect to all other arguments. Indices are + /// similar to argv indices, but are not exactly 1:1. + /// + /// For flags (i.e. those arguments which don't have an associated value), indices refer + /// to occurrence of the switch, such as `-f`, or `--flag`. However, for options the indices + /// refer to the *values* `-o val` would therefore not represent two distinct indices, only the + /// index for `val` would be recorded. This is by design. + /// + /// *NOTE:* For more information about how clap indices compare to argv indices, see + /// [`ArgMatches::index_of`] + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true) + /// .use_delimiter(true) + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o=val1,val2,val3"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 + /// // clap idices: ^2 ^3 ^4 + /// // + /// // clap sees the above as 'myapp -o val1 val2 val3' + /// // ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 ^4 + /// assert_eq!(m.indices_of("option").unwrap().collect::<Vec<_>>(), &[2, 3, 4]); + /// ``` + /// + /// Another quick example is when flags and options are used together + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true) + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("flag") + /// .short("f") + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o", "val1", "-f", "-o", "val2", "-f"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 ^2 ^3 ^4 ^5 ^6 + /// // clap idices: ^2 ^3 ^5 ^6 + /// + /// assert_eq!(m.indices_of("option").unwrap().collect::<Vec<_>>(), &[2, 5]); + /// assert_eq!(m.indices_of("flag").unwrap().collect::<Vec<_>>(), &[3, 6]); + /// ``` + /// + /// One final example, which is an odd case; if we *don't* use value delimiter as we did with + /// the first example above instead of `val1`, `val2` and `val3` all being distinc values, they + /// would all be a single value of `val1,val2,val3`, in which case case they'd only receive a + /// single index. + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg}; + /// let m = App::new("myapp") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("option") + /// .short("o") + /// .takes_value(true) + /// .multiple(true)) + /// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o=val1,val2,val3"]); + /// // ARGV idices: ^0 ^1 + /// // clap idices: ^2 + /// // + /// // clap sees the above as 'myapp -o "val1,val2,val3"' + /// // ^0 ^1 ^2 + /// assert_eq!(m.indices_of("option").unwrap().collect::<Vec<_>>(), &[2]); + /// ``` + /// [`ArgMatches`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html + /// [`ArgMatches::index_of`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.index_of + /// [delimiter]: ./struct.Arg.html#method.value_delimiter + pub fn indices_of<S: AsRef<str>>(&'a self, name: S) -> Option<Indices<'a>> { + if let Some(arg) = self.args.get(name.as_ref()) { + fn to_usize(i: &usize) -> usize { *i } + let to_usize: fn(&usize) -> usize = to_usize; // coerce to fn pointer + return Some(Indices { + iter: arg.indices.iter().map(to_usize), + }); + } + None + } + + /// Because [`Subcommand`]s are essentially "sub-[`App`]s" they have their own [`ArgMatches`] + /// as well. This method returns the [`ArgMatches`] for a particular subcommand or `None` if + /// the subcommand wasn't present at runtime. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, Arg, SubCommand}; + /// let app_m = App::new("myprog") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") + /// .short("d")) + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("test") + /// .arg(Arg::with_name("opt") + /// .long("option") + /// .takes_value(true))) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "-d", "test", "--option", "val" + /// ]); + /// + /// // Both parent commands, and child subcommands can have arguments present at the same times + /// assert!(app_m.is_present("debug")); + /// + /// // Get the subcommand's ArgMatches instance + /// if let Some(sub_m) = app_m.subcommand_matches("test") { + /// // Use the struct like normal + /// assert_eq!(sub_m.value_of("opt"), Some("val")); + /// } + /// ``` + /// [`Subcommand`]: ./struct.SubCommand.html + /// [`App`]: ./struct.App.html + /// [`ArgMatches`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html + pub fn subcommand_matches<S: AsRef<str>>(&self, name: S) -> Option<&ArgMatches<'a>> { + if let Some(ref s) = self.subcommand { + if s.name == name.as_ref() { + return Some(&s.matches); + } + } + None + } + + /// Because [`Subcommand`]s are essentially "sub-[`App`]s" they have their own [`ArgMatches`] + /// as well.But simply getting the sub-[`ArgMatches`] doesn't help much if we don't also know + /// which subcommand was actually used. This method returns the name of the subcommand that was + /// used at runtime, or `None` if one wasn't. + /// + /// *NOTE*: Subcommands form a hierarchy, where multiple subcommands can be used at runtime, + /// but only a single subcommand from any group of sibling commands may used at once. + /// + /// An ASCII art depiction may help explain this better...Using a fictional version of `git` as + /// the demo subject. Imagine the following are all subcommands of `git` (note, the author is + /// aware these aren't actually all subcommands in the real `git` interface, but it makes + /// explanation easier) + /// + /// ```notrust + /// Top Level App (git) TOP + /// | + /// ----------------------------------------- + /// / | \ \ + /// clone push add commit LEVEL 1 + /// | / \ / \ | + /// url origin remote ref name message LEVEL 2 + /// / /\ + /// path remote local LEVEL 3 + /// ``` + /// + /// Given the above fictional subcommand hierarchy, valid runtime uses would be (not an all + /// inclusive list, and not including argument options per command for brevity and clarity): + /// + /// ```sh + /// $ git clone url + /// $ git push origin path + /// $ git add ref local + /// $ git commit message + /// ``` + /// + /// Notice only one command per "level" may be used. You could not, for example, do `$ git + /// clone url push origin path` + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// # use clap::{App, Arg, SubCommand}; + /// let app_m = App::new("git") + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("clone")) + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("push")) + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("commit")) + /// .get_matches(); + /// + /// match app_m.subcommand_name() { + /// Some("clone") => {}, // clone was used + /// Some("push") => {}, // push was used + /// Some("commit") => {}, // commit was used + /// _ => {}, // Either no subcommand or one not tested for... + /// } + /// ``` + /// [`Subcommand`]: ./struct.SubCommand.html + /// [`App`]: ./struct.App.html + /// [`ArgMatches`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html + pub fn subcommand_name(&self) -> Option<&str> { + self.subcommand.as_ref().map(|sc| &sc.name[..]) + } + + /// This brings together [`ArgMatches::subcommand_matches`] and [`ArgMatches::subcommand_name`] + /// by returning a tuple with both pieces of information. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// # use clap::{App, Arg, SubCommand}; + /// let app_m = App::new("git") + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("clone")) + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("push")) + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("commit")) + /// .get_matches(); + /// + /// match app_m.subcommand() { + /// ("clone", Some(sub_m)) => {}, // clone was used + /// ("push", Some(sub_m)) => {}, // push was used + /// ("commit", Some(sub_m)) => {}, // commit was used + /// _ => {}, // Either no subcommand or one not tested for... + /// } + /// ``` + /// + /// Another useful scenario is when you want to support third party, or external, subcommands. + /// In these cases you can't know the subcommand name ahead of time, so use a variable instead + /// with pattern matching! + /// + /// ```rust + /// # use clap::{App, AppSettings}; + /// // Assume there is an external subcommand named "subcmd" + /// let app_m = App::new("myprog") + /// .setting(AppSettings::AllowExternalSubcommands) + /// .get_matches_from(vec![ + /// "myprog", "subcmd", "--option", "value", "-fff", "--flag" + /// ]); + /// + /// // All trailing arguments will be stored under the subcommand's sub-matches using an empty + /// // string argument name + /// match app_m.subcommand() { + /// (external, Some(sub_m)) => { + /// let ext_args: Vec<&str> = sub_m.values_of("").unwrap().collect(); + /// assert_eq!(external, "subcmd"); + /// assert_eq!(ext_args, ["--option", "value", "-fff", "--flag"]); + /// }, + /// _ => {}, + /// } + /// ``` + /// [`ArgMatches::subcommand_matches`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.subcommand_matches + /// [`ArgMatches::subcommand_name`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.subcommand_name + pub fn subcommand(&self) -> (&str, Option<&ArgMatches<'a>>) { + self.subcommand + .as_ref() + .map_or(("", None), |sc| (&sc.name[..], Some(&sc.matches))) + } + + /// Returns a string slice of the usage statement for the [`App`] or [`SubCommand`] + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// # use clap::{App, Arg, SubCommand}; + /// let app_m = App::new("myprog") + /// .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("test")) + /// .get_matches(); + /// + /// println!("{}", app_m.usage()); + /// ``` + /// [`Subcommand`]: ./struct.SubCommand.html + /// [`App`]: ./struct.App.html + pub fn usage(&self) -> &str { self.usage.as_ref().map_or("", |u| &u[..]) } +} + + +// The following were taken and adapated from vec_map source +// repo: https://github.com/contain-rs/vec-map +// commit: be5e1fa3c26e351761b33010ddbdaf5f05dbcc33 +// license: MIT - Copyright (c) 2015 The Rust Project Developers + +/// An iterator for getting multiple values out of an argument via the [`ArgMatches::values_of`] +/// method. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```rust +/// # use clap::{App, Arg}; +/// let m = App::new("myapp") +/// .arg(Arg::with_name("output") +/// .short("o") +/// .multiple(true) +/// .takes_value(true)) +/// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o", "val1", "val2"]); +/// +/// let mut values = m.values_of("output").unwrap(); +/// +/// assert_eq!(values.next(), Some("val1")); +/// assert_eq!(values.next(), Some("val2")); +/// assert_eq!(values.next(), None); +/// ``` +/// [`ArgMatches::values_of`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.values_of +#[derive(Debug, Clone)] +pub struct Values<'a> { + iter: Map<Iter<'a, OsString>, fn(&'a OsString) -> &'a str>, +} + +impl<'a> Iterator for Values<'a> { + type Item = &'a str; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option<&'a str> { self.iter.next() } + fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { self.iter.size_hint() } +} + +impl<'a> DoubleEndedIterator for Values<'a> { + fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<&'a str> { self.iter.next_back() } +} + +impl<'a> ExactSizeIterator for Values<'a> {} + +/// Creates an empty iterator. +impl<'a> Default for Values<'a> { + fn default() -> Self { + static EMPTY: [OsString; 0] = []; + // This is never called because the iterator is empty: + fn to_str_slice(_: &OsString) -> &str { unreachable!() }; + Values { + iter: EMPTY[..].iter().map(to_str_slice), + } + } +} + +/// An iterator for getting multiple values out of an argument via the [`ArgMatches::values_of_os`] +/// method. Usage of this iterator allows values which contain invalid UTF-8 code points unlike +/// [`Values`]. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +#[cfg_attr(not(unix), doc = " ```ignore")] +#[cfg_attr(unix, doc = " ```")] +/// # use clap::{App, Arg}; +/// use std::ffi::OsString; +/// use std::os::unix::ffi::{OsStrExt,OsStringExt}; +/// +/// let m = App::new("utf8") +/// .arg(Arg::from_usage("<arg> 'some arg'")) +/// .get_matches_from(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), +/// // "Hi {0xe9}!" +/// OsString::from_vec(vec![b'H', b'i', b' ', 0xe9, b'!'])]); +/// assert_eq!(&*m.value_of_os("arg").unwrap().as_bytes(), [b'H', b'i', b' ', 0xe9, b'!']); +/// ``` +/// [`ArgMatches::values_of_os`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.values_of_os +/// [`Values`]: ./struct.Values.html +#[derive(Debug, Clone)] +pub struct OsValues<'a> { + iter: Map<Iter<'a, OsString>, fn(&'a OsString) -> &'a OsStr>, +} + +impl<'a> Iterator for OsValues<'a> { + type Item = &'a OsStr; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option<&'a OsStr> { self.iter.next() } + fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { self.iter.size_hint() } +} + +impl<'a> DoubleEndedIterator for OsValues<'a> { + fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<&'a OsStr> { self.iter.next_back() } +} + +impl<'a> ExactSizeIterator for OsValues<'a> {} + +/// Creates an empty iterator. +impl<'a> Default for OsValues<'a> { + fn default() -> Self { + static EMPTY: [OsString; 0] = []; + // This is never called because the iterator is empty: + fn to_str_slice(_: &OsString) -> &OsStr { unreachable!() }; + OsValues { + iter: EMPTY[..].iter().map(to_str_slice), + } + } +} + +/// An iterator for getting multiple indices out of an argument via the [`ArgMatches::indices_of`] +/// method. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```rust +/// # use clap::{App, Arg}; +/// let m = App::new("myapp") +/// .arg(Arg::with_name("output") +/// .short("o") +/// .multiple(true) +/// .takes_value(true)) +/// .get_matches_from(vec!["myapp", "-o", "val1", "val2"]); +/// +/// let mut indices = m.indices_of("output").unwrap(); +/// +/// assert_eq!(indices.next(), Some(2)); +/// assert_eq!(indices.next(), Some(3)); +/// assert_eq!(indices.next(), None); +/// ``` +/// [`ArgMatches::indices_of`]: ./struct.ArgMatches.html#method.indices_of +#[derive(Debug, Clone)] +pub struct Indices<'a> { // would rather use '_, but: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48469 + iter: Map<Iter<'a, usize>, fn(&'a usize) -> usize>, +} + +impl<'a> Iterator for Indices<'a> { + type Item = usize; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option<usize> { self.iter.next() } + fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { self.iter.size_hint() } +} + +impl<'a> DoubleEndedIterator for Indices<'a> { + fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<usize> { self.iter.next_back() } +} + +impl<'a> ExactSizeIterator for Indices<'a> {} + +/// Creates an empty iterator. +impl<'a> Default for Indices<'a> { + fn default() -> Self { + static EMPTY: [usize; 0] = []; + // This is never called because the iterator is empty: + fn to_usize(_: &usize) -> usize { unreachable!() }; + Indices { + iter: EMPTY[..].iter().map(to_usize), + } + } +} + +#[cfg(test)] +mod tests { + use super::*; + + #[test] + fn test_default_values() { + let mut values: Values = Values::default(); + assert_eq!(values.next(), None); + } + + #[test] + fn test_default_values_with_shorter_lifetime() { + let matches = ArgMatches::new(); + let mut values = matches.values_of("").unwrap_or_default(); + assert_eq!(values.next(), None); + } + + #[test] + fn test_default_osvalues() { + let mut values: OsValues = OsValues::default(); + assert_eq!(values.next(), None); + } + + #[test] + fn test_default_osvalues_with_shorter_lifetime() { + let matches = ArgMatches::new(); + let mut values = matches.values_of_os("").unwrap_or_default(); + assert_eq!(values.next(), None); + } + + #[test] + fn test_default_indices() { + let mut indices: Indices = Indices::default(); + assert_eq!(indices.next(), None); + } + + #[test] + fn test_default_indices_with_shorter_lifetime() { + let matches = ArgMatches::new(); + let mut indices = matches.indices_of("").unwrap_or_default(); + assert_eq!(indices.next(), None); + } +} |