0

I'm working on command line search tool which searches through source files using given keyword. I use optparse to parse command line options. For now it look like this:

qs -p ~/Desktop/project -k line

if no -p argument is provided I use default(current) directory:

qs -k line

But, what I really want is doing the same as above but without -k, like this:

qs line

For now I have this:

OptionParser.new do |options|

  options.banner = "Usage: qs [options] [path] [keyword]\n" \
                   "\nSearch through files for a given keyword at specified path.\n" \
                   "If path is no specified current directory used by default."

  options.separator ""
  options.separator "Specific options:"

  options.on("--no-rec", "Looking in files only at that level.") do |r|
    $values[:recursion] = r
  end

  options.on('-p', '--path PATH', String, 'Path where to start search') do |path|
    $values[:path] = path
  end

  options.on('-k', '--key WORD', String, 'Word you are looking for ') do |key|
    $values[:keyword] = key
  end    

  options.on_tail("-h" , "--help", "Help documentation.") do
    $stderr.puts options
    exit 1
  end
end.parse!

As you can see it's impossible to do something like this:

$values[:keyword] = ARGV[2]

because there is no guarantee that all arguments will be present.

Is it possible to do this, without losing all this support from optparse ?

Thanks in advance.

1 Answer 1

1

When you use parse! (with the !), Optparse removes the options from ARGV, so afterward any other items (that Optparse doesn’t recognise) will be at ARGV[0] onwards.

So you should be able to do something like this:

OptionParser.new do |options|
  # as before, but without k option
end.parse!

# At this point all the options optparse knows about will be
# removed from ARGV, so you can get at what's left:
$values[:keyword] = ARGV[0]

Your Answer

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

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