Begin by declaring a type that defines the information
that you need to collect from the command line.
Decorate each stored property with one of ArgumentParser
's property wrappers,
and then declare conformance to ParsableCommand
and add the @main
attribute.
Finally, implement your command's logic in the run()
method.
import ArgumentParser
@main
struct Repeat: ParsableCommand {
@Flag(help: "Include a counter with each repetition.")
var includeCounter = false
@Option(name: .shortAndLong, help: "The number of times to repeat 'phrase'.")
var count: Int?
@Argument(help: "The phrase to repeat.")
var phrase: String
mutating func run() throws {
let repeatCount = count ?? 2
for i in 1...repeatCount {
if includeCounter {
print("\(i): \(phrase)")
} else {
print(phrase)
}
}
}
}
The ArgumentParser
library parses the command-line arguments,
instantiates your command type, and then either executes your run()
method
or exits with a useful message.
ArgumentParser
uses your properties' names and type information,
along with the details you provide using property wrappers,
to supply useful error messages and detailed help:
$ repeat hello --count 3
hello
hello
hello
$ repeat --count 3
Error: Missing expected argument 'phrase'.
Help: <phrase> The phrase to repeat.
Usage: repeat [--count <count>] [--include-counter] <phrase>
See 'repeat --help' for more information.
$ repeat --help
USAGE: repeat [--count <count>] [--include-counter] <phrase>
ARGUMENTS:
<phrase> The phrase to repeat.
OPTIONS:
--include-counter Include a counter with each repetition.
-c, --count <count> The number of times to repeat 'phrase'.
-h, --help Show help for this command.
For guides, articles, and API documentation see the library's documentation on the Web or in Xcode.
This repository includes a few examples of using the library:
repeat
is the example shown above.roll
is a simple utility implemented as a straight-line script.math
is an annotated example of using nested commands and subcommands.count-lines
usesasync
/await
code in its implementation.
You can also see examples of ArgumentParser
adoption among Swift project tools:
swift-format
uses some advanced features, like custom option values and hidden flags.swift-package-manager
includes a deep command hierarchy and extensive use of option groups.
The Swift Argument Parser package is source stable; version numbers follow semantic versioning. Source breaking changes to public API can only land in a new major version.
The public API of version 1.0 of the swift-argument-parser
package
consists of non-underscored declarations that are marked public in the ArgumentParser
module.
Interfaces that aren't part of the public API may continue to change in any release,
including the exact wording and formatting of the autogenerated help and error messages,
as well as the package’s examples, tests, utilities, and documentation.
Future minor versions of the package may introduce changes to these rules as needed.
We'd like this package to quickly embrace Swift language and toolchain improvements that are relevant to its mandate. Accordingly, from time to time, we expect that new versions of this package will require clients to upgrade to a more recent Swift toolchain release. Requiring a new Swift release will only require a minor version bump.
To use the ArgumentParser
library in a SwiftPM project,
add it to the dependencies for your package and your command-line executable target:
let package = Package(
// name, platforms, products, etc.
dependencies: [
// other dependencies
.package(url: "https://github.com/apple/swift-argument-parser", from: "1.0.0"),
],
targets: [
.executableTarget(name: "<command-line-tool>", dependencies: [
// other dependencies
.product(name: "ArgumentParser", package: "swift-argument-parser"),
]),
// other targets
]
)