358 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
358 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# jackspeak
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A very strict and proper argument parser.
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Validate string, boolean, and number options, from the command
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line and the environment.
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Call the `jack` method with a config object, and then chain
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methods off of it.
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At the end, call the `.parse()` method, and you'll get an object
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with `positionals` and `values` members.
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Any unrecognized configs or invalid values will throw an error.
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As long as you define configs using object literals, types will
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be properly inferred and TypeScript will know what kinds of
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things you got.
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If you give it a prefix for environment variables, then defaults
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will be read from the environment, and parsed values written back
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to it, so you can easily pass configs through to child processes.
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Automatically generates a `usage`/`help` banner by calling the
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`.usage()` method.
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Unless otherwise noted, all methods return the object itself.
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## USAGE
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```js
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import { jack } from 'jackspeak'
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// this works too:
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// const { jack } = require('jackspeak')
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const { positionals, values } = jack({ envPrefix: 'FOO' })
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.flag({
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asdf: { description: 'sets the asfd flag', short: 'a', default: true },
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'no-asdf': { description: 'unsets the asdf flag', short: 'A' },
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foo: { description: 'another boolean', short: 'f' },
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})
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.optList({
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'ip-addrs': {
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description: 'addresses to ip things',
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delim: ',', // defaults to '\n'
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default: ['127.0.0.1'],
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},
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})
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.parse([
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'some',
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'positional',
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'--ip-addrs',
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'192.168.0.1',
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'--ip-addrs',
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'1.1.1.1',
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'args',
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'--foo', // sets the foo flag
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'-A', // short for --no-asdf, sets asdf flag to false
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])
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console.log(process.env.FOO_ASDF) // '0'
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console.log(process.env.FOO_FOO) // '1'
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console.log(values) // {
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// 'ip-addrs': ['192.168.0.1', '1.1.1.1'],
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// foo: true,
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// asdf: false,
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// }
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console.log(process.env.FOO_IP_ADDRS) // '192.168.0.1,1.1.1.1'
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console.log(positionals) // ['some', 'positional', 'args']
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```
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## `jack(options: JackOptions = {}) => Jack`
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Returns a `Jack` object that can be used to chain and add
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field definitions. The other methods (apart from `validate()`,
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`parse()`, and `usage()` obviously) return the same Jack object,
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updated with the new types, so they can be chained together as
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shown in the code examples.
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Options:
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- `allowPositionals` Defaults to true. Set to `false` to not
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allow any positional arguments.
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- `envPrefix` Set to a string to write configs to and read
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configs from the environment. For example, if set to `MY_APP`
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then the `foo-bar` config will default based on the value of
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`env.MY_APP_FOO_BAR` and will write back to that when parsed.
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Boolean values are written as `'1'` and `'0'`, and will be
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treated as `true` if they're `'1'` or false otherwise.
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Number values are written with their `toString()`
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representation.
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Strings are just strings.
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Any value with `multiple: true` will be represented in the
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environment split by a delimiter, which defaults to `\n`.
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- `env` The place to read/write environment variables. Defaults
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to `process.env`.
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- `usage` A short usage string to print at the top of the help
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banner.
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- `stopAtPositional` Boolean, default false. Stop parsing opts
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and flags at the first positional argument. This is useful if
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you want to pass certain options to subcommands, like some
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programs do, so you can stop parsing and pass the positionals
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to the subcommand to parse.
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- `stopAtPositionalTest` Conditional `stopAtPositional`. Provide
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a function that takes a positional argument string and returns
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boolean. If it returns `true`, then parsing will stop. Useful
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when _some_ subcommands should parse the rest of the command
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line options, and others should not.
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### `Jack.heading(text: string, level?: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6)`
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Define a short string heading, used in the `usage()` output.
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Indentation of the heading and subsequent description/config
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usage entries (up until the next heading) is set by the heading
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level.
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If the first usage item defined is a heading, it is always
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treated as level 1, regardless of the argument provided.
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Headings level 1 and 2 will have a line of padding underneath
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them. Headings level 3 through 6 will not.
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### `Jack.description(text: string, { pre?: boolean } = {})`
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Define a long string description, used in the `usage()` output.
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If the `pre` option is set to `true`, then whitespace will not be
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normalized. However, if any line is too long for the width
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allotted, it will still be wrapped.
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## Option Definitions
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Configs are defined by calling the appropriate field definition
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method with an object where the keys are the long option name,
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and the value defines the config.
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Options:
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- `type` Only needed for the `addFields` method, as the others
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set it implicitly. Can be `'string'`, `'boolean'`, or
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`'number'`.
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- `multiple` Only needed for the `addFields` method, as the
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others set it implicitly. Set to `true` to define an array
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type. This means that it can be set on the CLI multiple times,
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set as an array in the `values`
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and it is represented in the environment as a delimited string.
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- `short` A one-character shorthand for the option.
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- `description` Some words to describe what this option is and
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why you'd set it.
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- `hint` (Only relevant for non-boolean types) The thing to show
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in the usage output, like `--option=<hint>`
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- `validate` A function that returns false (or throws) if an
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option value is invalid.
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- `validOptions` An array of strings or numbers that define the
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valid values that can be set. This is not allowed on `boolean`
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(flag) options. May be used along with a `validate()` method.
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- `default` A default value for the field. Note that this may be
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overridden by an environment variable, if present.
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### `Jack.flag({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more boolean fields.
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Boolean options may be set to `false` by using a
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`--no-${optionName}` argument, which will be implicitly created
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if it's not defined to be something else.
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If a boolean option named `no-${optionName}` with the same
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`multiple` setting is in the configuration, then that will be
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treated as a negating flag.
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### `Jack.flagList({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more boolean array fields.
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### `Jack.num({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more number fields. These will be set in the
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environment as a stringified number, and included in the `values`
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object as a number.
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### `Jack.numList({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more number list fields. These will be set in the
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environment as a delimited set of stringified numbers, and
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included in the `values` as a number array.
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### `Jack.opt({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more string option fields.
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### `Jack.optList({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more string list fields.
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### `Jack.addFields({ [option: string]: definition, ... })`
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Define one or more fields of any type. Note that `type` and
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`multiple` must be set explicitly on each definition when using
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this method.
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## Actions
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Use these methods on a Jack object that's already had its config
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fields defined.
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### `Jack.parse(args: string[] = process.argv): { positionals: string[], values: OptionsResults }`
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Parse the arguments list, write to the environment if `envPrefix`
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is set, and returned the parsed values and remaining positional
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arguments.
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### `Jack.validate(o: any): asserts o is OptionsResults`
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Throws an error if the object provided is not a valid result set,
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for the configurations defined thusfar.
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### `Jack.usage(): string`
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Returns the compiled `usage` string, with all option descriptions
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and heading/description text, wrapped to the appropriate width
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for the terminal.
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### `Jack.setConfigValues(options: OptionsResults, src?: string)`
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Validate the `options` argument, and set the default value for
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each field that appears in the options.
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Values provided will be overridden by environment variables or
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command line arguments.
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### `Jack.usageMarkdown(): string`
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Returns the compiled `usage` string, with all option descriptions
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and heading/description text, but as markdown instead of
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formatted for a terminal, for generating HTML documentation for
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your CLI.
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## Some Example Code
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Also see [the examples
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folder](https://github.com/isaacs/jackspeak/tree/master/examples)
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```js
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import { jack } from 'jackspeak'
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const j = jack({
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// Optional
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// This will be auto-generated from the descriptions if not supplied
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// top level usage line, printed by -h
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// will be auto-generated if not specified
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usage: 'foo [options] <files>',
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})
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.heading('The best Foo that ever Fooed')
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.description(
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`
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Executes all the files and interprets their output as
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TAP formatted test result data.
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To parse TAP data from stdin, specify "-" as a filename.
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`,
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)
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// flags don't take a value, they're boolean on or off, and can be
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// turned off by prefixing with `--no-`
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// so this adds support for -b to mean --bail, or -B to mean --no-bail
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.flag({
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flag: {
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// specify a short value if you like. this must be a single char
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short: 'f',
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// description is optional as well.
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description: `Make the flags wave`,
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// default value for flags is 'false', unless you change it
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default: true,
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},
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'no-flag': {
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// you can can always negate a flag with `--no-flag`
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// specifying a negate option will let you define a short
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// single-char option for negation.
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short: 'F',
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description: `Do not wave the flags`,
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},
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})
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// Options that take a value are specified with `opt()`
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.opt({
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reporter: {
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short: 'R',
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description: 'the style of report to display',
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},
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})
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// if you want a number, say so, and jackspeak will enforce it
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.num({
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jobs: {
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short: 'j',
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description: 'how many jobs to run in parallel',
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default: 1,
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},
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})
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// A list is an option that can be specified multiple times,
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// to expand into an array of all the settings. Normal opts
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// will just give you the last value specified.
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.optList({
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'node-arg': {},
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})
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// a flagList is an array of booleans, so `-ddd` is [true, true, true]
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// count the `true` values to treat it as a counter.
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.flagList({
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debug: { short: 'd' },
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})
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// opts take a value, and is set to the string in the results
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// you can combine multiple short-form flags together, but
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// an opt will end the combine chain, posix-style. So,
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// -bofilename would be like --bail --output-file=filename
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.opt({
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'output-file': {
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short: 'o',
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// optional: make it -o<file> in the help output insead of -o<value>
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hint: 'file',
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description: `Send the raw output to the specified file.`,
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},
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})
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// now we can parse argv like this:
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const { values, positionals } = j.parse(process.argv)
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// or decide to show the usage banner
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console.log(j.usage())
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// or validate an object config we got from somewhere else
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try {
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j.validate(someConfig)
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} catch (er) {
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console.error('someConfig is not valid!', er)
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}
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```
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## Name
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The inspiration for this module is [yargs](http://npm.im/yargs), which
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is pirate talk themed. Yargs has all the features, and is infinitely
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flexible. "Jackspeak" is the slang of the royal navy. This module
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does not have all the features. It is declarative and rigid by design.
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