Jump to builder tutorial
You can create an application declaratively with a struct
and some
attributes. This requires enabling the derive
feature flag.
$ 01_quick_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
01_quick_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS] [NAME] [SUBCOMMAND]
ARGS:
<NAME> Optional name to operate on
OPTIONS:
-c, --config <FILE> Sets a custom config file
-d, --debug Turn debugging information on
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
SUBCOMMANDS:
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
test does testing things
By default, the program does nothing:
$ 01_quick_derive
Debug mode is off
But you can mix and match the various features
$ 01_quick_derive -dd test
Debug mode is on
Not printing testing lists...
In addition to this tutorial, see the derive reference.
You use derive Parser
the start building a parser.
$ 02_apps_derive --help
MyApp 1.0
Kevin K. <[email protected]>
Does awesome things
USAGE:
02_apps_derive[EXE] --two <TWO> --one <ONE>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
--one <ONE>
--two <TWO>
-V, --version Print version information
$ 02_apps_derive --version
MyApp 1.0
You can use #[clap(author, version, about)]
attribute defaults to fill these fields in from your Cargo.toml
file.
$ 02_crate_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
02_crate_derive[EXE] --two <TWO> --one <ONE>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
--one <ONE>
--two <TWO>
-V, --version Print version information
$ 02_crate_derive --version
clap [..]
You can use derive attributes to change the application level behavior of clap.
$ 02_app_settings_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
02_app_settings_derive[EXE] --two <TWO> --one <ONE>
OPTIONS:
--two <TWO>
--one <ONE>
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 02_app_settings_derive --one -1 --one -3 --two 10
two: "10"
one: "-3"
Flags are switches that can be on/off:
$ 03_01_flag_bool_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_01_flag_bool_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-v, --verbose
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_01_flag_bool_derive
verbose: false
$ 03_01_flag_bool_derive --verbose
verbose: true
$ 03_01_flag_bool_derive --verbose --verbose
? failed
error: The argument '--verbose' was provided more than once, but cannot be used multiple times
USAGE:
03_01_flag_bool_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS]
For more information try --help
Or counted.
$ 03_01_flag_count_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_01_flag_count_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-v, --verbose
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_01_flag_count_derive
verbose: 0
$ 03_01_flag_count_derive --verbose
verbose: 1
$ 03_01_flag_count_derive --verbose --verbose
verbose: 2
Flags can also accept a value.
$ 03_02_option_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_02_option_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-n, --name <NAME>
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_02_option_derive
name: None
$ 03_02_option_derive --name bob
name: Some("bob")
$ 03_02_option_derive --name=bob
name: Some("bob")
$ 03_02_option_derive -n bob
name: Some("bob")
$ 03_02_option_derive -n=bob
name: Some("bob")
$ 03_02_option_derive -nbob
name: Some("bob")
Or you can have users specify values by their position on the command-line:
$ 03_03_positional_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_03_positional_derive[EXE] [NAME]
ARGS:
<NAME>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_03_positional_derive
name: None
$ 03_03_positional_derive bob
name: Some("bob")
Subcommands are derived with Subcommand
that get added via #[clap(subcommand)]
attribute. Each
instance of a Subcommand can have its own version, author(s), Args, and even its own
subcommands.
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_04_subcommands_derive[EXE] <SUBCOMMAND>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
SUBCOMMANDS:
add Adds files to myapp
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive help add
03_04_subcommands_derive[EXE]-add [..]
Adds files to myapp
USAGE:
03_04_subcommands_derive[EXE] add [NAME]
ARGS:
<NAME>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive add bob
'myapp add' was used, name is: Some("bob")
Above, we used a struct-variant to define the add
subcommand. Alternatively,
you can
use a struct for your subcommand's arguments.
Because we used command: Commands
instead of command: Option<Commands>
:
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive
? failed
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_04_subcommands_derive[EXE] <SUBCOMMAND>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
SUBCOMMANDS:
add Adds files to myapp
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Because we added #[clap(propagate_version = true)]
:
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive --version
clap [..]
$ 03_04_subcommands_derive add --version
03_04_subcommands_derive[EXE]-add [..]
We've previously showed that arguments can be required
or optional. When
optional, you work with an Option
and can unwrap_or
. Alternatively, you can
set #[clap(default_value_t)]
.
$ 03_05_default_values_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
03_05_default_values_derive[EXE] [NAME]
ARGS:
<NAME> [default: alice]
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 03_05_default_values_derive
name: "alice"
$ 03_05_default_values_derive bob
name: "bob"
If you have arguments of specific values you want to test for, you can derive
ArgEnum
.
This allows you specify the valid values for that argument. If the user does not use one of those specific values, they will receive a graceful exit with error message informing them of the mistake, and what the possible valid values are
$ 04_01_enum_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
04_01_enum_derive[EXE] <MODE>
ARGS:
<MODE> What mode to run the program in [possible values: fast, slow]
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 04_01_enum_derive fast
Hare
$ 04_01_enum_derive slow
Tortoise
$ 04_01_enum_derive medium
? failed
error: "medium" isn't a valid value for '<MODE>'
[possible values: fast, slow]
USAGE:
04_01_enum_derive[EXE] <MODE>
For more information try --help
More generally, you can validate and parse into any data type.
More generally, you can parse into any data type.
$ 04_02_parse_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
04_02_parse_derive[EXE] <PORT>
ARGS:
<PORT> Network port to use
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 04_02_parse_derive 22
PORT = 22
$ 04_02_parse_derive foobar
? failed
error: Invalid value "foobar" for '<PORT>': invalid digit found in string
For more information try --help
A custom validator can be used to improve the error messages or provide additional validation:
$ 04_02_validate_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
04_02_validate_derive[EXE] <PORT>
ARGS:
<PORT> Network port to use
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
-V, --version Print version information
$ 04_02_validate_derive 22
PORT = 22
$ 04_02_validate_derive 0
? failed
error: Invalid value "0" for '<PORT>': Port not in range 1-65535
For more information try --help
You can declare dependencies or conflicts between Arg
s or even ArgGroup
s.
ArgGroup
s make it easier to declare relations instead of having to list each
individually, or when you want a rule to apply "any but not all" arguments.
Perhaps the most common use of ArgGroup
s is to require one and only one argument to be
present out of a given set. Imagine that you had multiple arguments, and you want one of them to
be required, but making all of them required isn't feasible because perhaps they conflict with
each other.
$ 04_03_relations_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
04_03_relations_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS] <--set-ver <VER>|--major|--minor|--patch> [INPUT_FILE]
ARGS:
<INPUT_FILE> some regular input
OPTIONS:
-c <CONFIG>
-h, --help Print help information
--major auto inc major
--minor auto inc minor
--patch auto inc patch
--set-ver <VER> set version manually
--spec-in <SPEC_IN> some special input argument
-V, --version Print version information
$ 04_03_relations_derive
? failed
error: The following required arguments were not provided:
<--set-ver <VER>|--major|--minor|--patch>
USAGE:
04_03_relations_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS] <--set-ver <VER>|--major|--minor|--patch> [INPUT_FILE]
For more information try --help
$ 04_03_relations_derive --major
Version: 2.2.3
$ 04_03_relations_derive --major --minor
? failed
error: The argument '--major' cannot be used with '--minor'
USAGE:
04_03_relations_derive[EXE] <--set-ver <VER>|--major|--minor|--patch>
For more information try --help
$ 04_03_relations_derive --major -c config.toml
? failed
error: The following required arguments were not provided:
<INPUT_FILE|--spec-in <SPEC_IN>>
USAGE:
04_03_relations_derive[EXE] -c <CONFIG> <--set-ver <VER>|--major|--minor|--patch> <INPUT_FILE|--spec-in <SPEC_IN>>
For more information try --help
$ 04_03_relations_derive --major -c config.toml --spec-in input.txt
Version: 2.2.3
Doing work using input input.txt and config config.toml
As a last resort, you can create custom errors with the basics of clap's formatting.
$ 04_04_custom_derive --help
clap [..]
A simple to use, efficient, and full-featured Command Line Argument Parser
USAGE:
04_04_custom_derive[EXE] [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]
ARGS:
<INPUT_FILE> some regular input
OPTIONS:
-c <CONFIG>
-h, --help Print help information
--major auto inc major
--minor auto inc minor
--patch auto inc patch
--set-ver <VER> set version manually
--spec-in <SPEC_IN> some special input argument
-V, --version Print version information
$ 04_04_custom_derive
? failed
error: Can only modify one version field
USAGE:
clap [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]
For more information try --help
$ 04_04_custom_derive --major
Version: 2.2.3
$ 04_04_custom_derive --major --minor
? failed
error: Can only modify one version field
USAGE:
clap [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]
For more information try --help
$ 04_04_custom_derive --major -c config.toml
? failed
Version: 2.2.3
error: INPUT_FILE or --spec-in is required when using --config
USAGE:
clap [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]
For more information try --help
$ 04_04_custom_derive --major -c config.toml --spec-in input.txt
Version: 2.2.3
Doing work using input input.txt and config config.toml
- For more complex demonstration of features, see our examples.
- See the derive reference to understand how to use anything in the builder API in the derive API.
- Proactively check for bad
Command
configurations by callingCommand::debug_assert
in a test (example)
New example code:
- Please update the corresponding section in the builder tutorial
- Building: They must be added to Cargo.toml with the appropriate
required-features
. - Testing: Ensure there is a markdown file with trycmd syntax (generally they'll go in here).
See also the general CONTRIBUTING.