3

I want to pass command line options that start with a dash (- or --) to a Perl programm I am running with the -e flag:

$ perl -E 'say @ARGV' -foo
Unrecognized switch: -foo  (-h will show valid options).

Passing arguments that don't start with a - obviously work:

$ perl -E 'say @ARGV' foo
foo

How do I properly escape those so the program reads them correctly?

I tried a bunch of variations like \-foo, \\-foo, '-foo', '\-foo', '\\-foo'. None of those work though some produce different messages. \\-foo actually runs and outputs \-foo.

2 Answers 2

5

You can use the -s, like:

perl -se 'print "got $some\n"' -- -some=SOME

the above prints:

got SOME

From the perlrun:

-s enables rudimentary switch parsing for switches on the command line after the program name but before any filename arguments (or before an argument of --). Any switch found there is removed from @ARGV and sets the corresponding variable in the Perl program. The following program prints "1" if the program is invoked with a -xyz switch, and "abc" if it is invoked with -xyz=abc.

            #!/usr/bin/perl -s
            if ($xyz) { print "$xyz\n" }

        Do note that a switch like --help creates the variable "${-help}", which is not compliant with "use strict
        "refs"".  Also, when using this option on a script with warnings enabled you may get a lot of spurious
        "used only once" warnings.

For the simple arg-passing use the --, like:

perl -E 'say "@ARGV"' -- -some -xxx -ddd

prints

-some -xxx -ddd
2
  • Actually I only want the --. Thanks for that. :)
    – simbabque
    Jul 1, 2015 at 8:03
  • I don't need the parsing, I just need them to go through to the program.
    – simbabque
    Jul 1, 2015 at 8:04
2

Just pass -- before the flags that are to go to the program, like so:

  perl -e 'print join("/", @ARGV)' -- -foo bar

prints

  -foo/bar

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.