forked from toolshed/abra
refactor: urfave v3
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19
vendor/github.com/spf13/pflag/flag.go
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vendored
19
vendor/github.com/spf13/pflag/flag.go
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vendored
@ -27,32 +27,23 @@ unaffected.
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Define flags using flag.String(), Bool(), Int(), etc.
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This declares an integer flag, -flagname, stored in the pointer ip, with type *int.
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var ip = flag.Int("flagname", 1234, "help message for flagname")
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If you like, you can bind the flag to a variable using the Var() functions.
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var flagvar int
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func init() {
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flag.IntVar(&flagvar, "flagname", 1234, "help message for flagname")
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}
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Or you can create custom flags that satisfy the Value interface (with
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pointer receivers) and couple them to flag parsing by
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flag.Var(&flagVal, "name", "help message for flagname")
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For such flags, the default value is just the initial value of the variable.
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After all flags are defined, call
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flag.Parse()
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to parse the command line into the defined flags.
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Flags may then be used directly. If you're using the flags themselves,
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they are all pointers; if you bind to variables, they're values.
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fmt.Println("ip has value ", *ip)
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fmt.Println("flagvar has value ", flagvar)
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@ -63,26 +54,22 @@ The arguments are indexed from 0 through flag.NArg()-1.
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The pflag package also defines some new functions that are not in flag,
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that give one-letter shorthands for flags. You can use these by appending
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'P' to the name of any function that defines a flag.
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var ip = flag.IntP("flagname", "f", 1234, "help message")
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var flagvar bool
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func init() {
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flag.BoolVarP(&flagvar, "boolname", "b", true, "help message")
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}
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flag.VarP(&flagval, "varname", "v", "help message")
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Shorthand letters can be used with single dashes on the command line.
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Boolean shorthand flags can be combined with other shorthand flags.
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Command line flag syntax:
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--flag // boolean flags only
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--flag=x
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Unlike the flag package, a single dash before an option means something
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different than a double dash. Single dashes signify a series of shorthand
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letters for flags. All but the last shorthand letter must be boolean flags.
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// boolean flags
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-f
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-abc
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@ -940,9 +927,9 @@ func (f *FlagSet) usage() {
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}
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}
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// --unknown (args will be empty)
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// --unknown --next-flag ... (args will be --next-flag ...)
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// --unknown arg ... (args will be arg ...)
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//--unknown (args will be empty)
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//--unknown --next-flag ... (args will be --next-flag ...)
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//--unknown arg ... (args will be arg ...)
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func stripUnknownFlagValue(args []string) []string {
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if len(args) == 0 {
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//--unknown
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