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simple-argparse4j

Very simple argument parser, inspired by argparse4j (https://argparse4j.github.io/).

Normally, I use argparse4j for all my little command-line based tools. But for one project, I needed to be able to have unparsed options that resemble options, as I needed to pass on these options to processes that get launched. I didn't find a solution to get argparse4j to be more lenient, hence I implemented a very simple version of a command-line option parser inspired by argparse4j.

Supported data types

The parser supports the following data types:

  • string
  • boolean
  • byte
  • short
  • int
  • long
  • float
  • double
  • file (any file/dir, existing file/dir, non-existing file/dir)

Apart from boolean all data types require an argument.

Defining options

Here is an example for defining an option:

import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.ArgumentParser;
...
ArgumentParser parser = new ArgumentParser(getName());
parser.addOption("--name")
  .dest("name")
  .help("the name of the environment")
  .required(true);

The parser will look for an option that starts with a flag of --name and stores the associated argument that it will find (using the key specified with dest(...)). help(...) specifies the help string. required(true) specifies that the user has to supply the argument (by default, options are optional).

It is also possible to supply two flags, e.g., a short form and a long version:

import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.ArgumentParser;
...
ArgumentParser parser = new ArgumentParser(getName());
parser.addOption("-n", "--name")
  .dest("name")
  .help("the name of the environment")
  .required(true);

Other settings for ArgumentParser:

  • screenWidth(int) -- the width of the screen, which gets used when printing the help screen.
  • breakChars(char[]) -- the characters that are used to break long help lines into smaller ones to fit within the defined screen width.

Other settings for Option:

  • argument(boolean) -- specifies whether the option is a flag (false) or requires an argument (true). By setting the type of an option to boolean, this gets automatically set to false.
  • multiple(boolean) -- specifies whether the option can occur multiple times
  • setDefault(...) -- sets the default value (if not a required option); in conjunction with multiple(true), you have to set a java.util.List object
  • type(Type) -- sets the type to enforce when parsing the options rather than when retrieving them from the Namespace object, e.g., double or boolean.
  • metaVar(String) -- for setting the display string for the argument of an option (uses upper case). By default, the destination string is used.

Parsing options

The following snippet parses the options (args) and returns them as Namespace object (parseArgs(String[]) method). In case of invalid options, missing required options or help being request, an ArgumentParserException is thrown. Using the parser's handleError(ArgumentParserException) you can output a help screen generated from the defined options.

import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.ArgumentParserException;
import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.Namespace;
...
Namespace ns;
try {
  ns = parser.parseArgs(args);
}
catch (ArgumentParserException e) {
  parser.handleError(e);
  return !parser.getHelpRequested();  // help request is valid operation
}

Using parseArgs(String[],true) you can remove the all the parsed options from the provided string array. parseArgs(String[]) does not remove them by default.

Retrieving parsed values

Once the options have been parsed, you can retrieve (typed) from the Namespace object:

  • getString(String) -- returns the string associated with the provided key
  • getBoolean(String) -- returns the boolean associated with the provided key; whether a true or false gets returned is determine by the default value. Without specifying an explicit default value, false gets returned if the flag is present, otherwise true. You can invert this by simply using setDefault(true) when defining the option.
  • getByte(String) -- returns the byte associated with the provided key
  • getShort(String) -- returns the short associated with the provided key
  • getInt(String) -- returns the integer associated with the provided key
  • getLong(String) -- returns the long associated with the provided key
  • getFloat(String) -- returns the float associated with the provided key
  • getDouble(String) -- returns the double associated with the provided key
  • getFile(String) -- returns the double associated with the provided key
  • getList(String) -- returns the list associated with the provided key

Example

The following example configures several parameters, not all of them required. It then parses the arguments provided to the application and outputs the parsed values.

import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.ArgumentParser;
import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.ArgumentParserException;
import com.github.fracpete.simpleargparse4j.Namespace;

public static void main(String[] args) {
  // define the options
  ArgumentParser parser = new ArgumentParser("create");
  parser.addOption("--name")
    .dest("name")
    .help("the name of the environment")
    .required(true);
  parser.addOption("--java")
    .dest("java")
    .help("the full path of the java binary to use for launching Weka")
    .setDefault("");
  parser.addOption("--memory")
    .dest("memory")
    .help("the heap size to use for launching Weka (eg '1024m' or '2g')")
    .setDefault("");
  parser.addOption("--weka")
    .dest("weka")
    .help("the full path to the weka.jar to use")
    .required(true);
  parser.addOption("--wekafiles")
    .dest("wekafiles")
    .help("the full path to the 'wekafiles' directory to initialize the environment with")
    .setDefault("");
  parser.addOption("--envvar")
    .dest("envvar")
    .help("optional environment variables to set (key=value)")
    .multiple(true);
  
  // parse the options
  Namespace ns;
  try {
    ns = parser.parseArgs(args, true);
  }
  catch (ArgumentParserException e) {
    parser.handleError(e);
    return false;
  }

  // output the parsed values
  System.out.println("Name: " + ns.getString("name"));
  System.out.println("Jav: " + ns.getString("java"));
  System.out.println("Memory: " + ns.getString("memory"));
  System.out.println("Weka jar: " + ns.getString("weka"));
  System.out.println("Env. vars: " + ns.getList("envvar"));
}

Maven

Add the following dependency to your pom.xml:

    <dependency>
      <groupId>com.github.fracpete</groupId>
      <artifactId>simple-argparse4j</artifactId>
      <version>0.0.13</version>
    </dependency>

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Very simple argument parser, inspired by argparse4j (https://argparse4j.github.io/).

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