I have a script which does some basic awk like filtering using a while(<>)
loop. I want the script to be able to display usage and version, but otherwise assume all arguments are files. How do I combine getopt with the <> operator?
3 Answers
Getopt plays nicely with @ARGV
. Example
use strict; use warnings;
use feature 'say';
use Getopt::Long;
GetOptions 'foo=s' => \my $foo;
say "foo=$foo";
say "ARGV:";
say for @ARGV;
Then:
$ perl test.pl --foo fooval --bar
Unknown option: bar
foo=fooval
ARGV:
$ perl test.pl --foo fooval bar
foo=fooval
ARGV:
bar
$ perl test.pl --foo fooval -- --bar
foo=fooval
ARGV:
--bar
Summary:
- Any items in
@ARGV
after the switches are simply left there. - This works as expected for normal filenames (that don't start with a hyphen-minus).
- You can always use a
--
to abort parsing of switches.
This works as expected for me.
use warnings;
use strict;
use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptions);
my %opt;
GetOptions(\%opt, qw(help)) or die;
die 'usage' if $opt{help};
while (<>) {
print;
}
As others have mentioned, Getopt::Long is the prefered module. It has been around since Perl 3.x.
There's a lot of options, and it can take a while to get use to the syntax, but it does exactly what you want:
use strict;
use warnings;
use Getopt::Long;
use feature qw(say);
use Pod::Usage;
my ( $version, $help ); #Strict, we have to predeclare these:
GetOptions(
'help' => \$help,
'version' => \$version,
) or pod2usage ( -message => "Invalid options" );
That's all there is to it. When the Getoptions
subroutine runs, it will parse your command line (the @ARGV
array) for anything that starts with a -
or --
. It will process those, and when it comes to either a double dash by itself, or an option not starting with a dash, it will assume those are files and it's done processing. At that point, all of the option strings (and their parameters) have been shifted out of the @ARGSV
array, and you're left with your files:
if ( $help ) {
pod2usage;
}
if ( $version ) {
say "Version 1.23.3";
exit;
}
while ( my $file = <>) {
...
}
Getopts::Long
is part of the standard Perl installation, so it should always be available to you.
I know many people are wary of using these modules because they think they're not standard Perl, but they are just as much a part of Perl as commands like print
and chomp
. Perl comes with over 500 of them and they're yours to use.
-
Actually there are a few modules that don't come with Perl, that I would consider "standard Perl". LWP is one example. Aug 16, 2013 at 20:31
-
There are certain modules I would love to see included in a standard Perl installation:
LWP
,Readonly
, Net::LDAP, and some JSON and XML module. I do a lot of scripting on servers under the control of others. Getting any optional CPAN module installed is a pain. The servers at my current company are on Perl 5.8.9. I can't even usesay
orautodie
. Fortunately,Getopts::Long
is included.– David W.Aug 16, 2013 at 23:16