Command Line Option Parser


Licenses
CNRI-Python-GPL-Compatible/CNRI-Python-GPL-Compatible

Documentation

optparse: Command line optional argument parser

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optparse hex sticker

A pure R language command line parser inspired by Python's 'optparse' library to be used with Rscript to write "#!" shebang scripts that accept short and long flag/options.

To install the last version released on CRAN use the following command:

install.packages("optparse")

To install the development version use the following command:

install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("trevorld/r-optparse")

dependencies

This package depends on the R package getopt.

To run the unit tests you will need the suggested R package testthat and in order to build the vignette you will need the suggested R package knitr which in turn probably requires the system tool pandoc:

sudo apt install pandoc

examples

A simple example:

library("optparse")
parser <- OptionParser()
parser <- add_option(parser, c("-v", "--verbose"), action="store_true",
                default=TRUE, help="Print extra output [default]")
parser <- add_option(parser, c("-q", "--quietly"), action="store_false",
                    dest="verbose", help="Print little output")
parser <- add_option(parser, c("-c", "--count"), type="integer", default=5,
                help="Number of random normals to generate [default %default]",
                metavar="number")
parse_args(parser, args = c("--quietly", "--count=15"))
## $help
## [1] FALSE
##
## $verbose
## [1] FALSE
##
## $count
## [1] 15

Note that the args argument of parse_args default is commandArgs(trailing=TRUE) so it typically doesn't need to be explicitly set if writing an Rscript.

One can also equivalently make options in a list:

library("optparse")
option_list <- list(
    make_option(c("-v", "--verbose"), action="store_true", default=TRUE,
        help="Print extra output [default]"),
    make_option(c("-q", "--quietly"), action="store_false",
        dest="verbose", help="Print little output"),
    make_option(c("-c", "--count"), type="integer", default=5,
        help="Number of random normals to generate [default %default]",
        metavar="number")
    )

parse_args(OptionParser(option_list=option_list), args = c("--verbose", "--count=11"))
## $verbose
## [1] TRUE
##
## $count
## [1] 11
##
## $help
## [1] FALSE

optparse automatically creates a help option:

parse_args(parser, args = c("--help"))
Usage: %prog [options]


Options:
    -h, --help
            Show this help message and exit

    -v, --verbose
            Print extra output [default]

    -q, --quietly
            Print little output

    -c NUMBER, --count=NUMBER
            Number of random normals to generate [default 5]


Error in parse_args(parser, args = c("--help")) : help requested

Note by default when optparse::parse_args sees a --help flag it will first print out a usage message and then either throw an error in interactive use or call quit in non-interactive use (i.e. when used within an Rscript called by a shell). To disable the error/quit set the argument print_help_and_exit to FALSE in parse_args and to simply print out the usage string one can also use the function print_usage.

optparse has limited positional argument support, other command-line parsers for R such as argparse have richer positional argument support:

parse_args(parser, args = c("-vc", "25", "75", "22"), positional_arguments = TRUE)
## $options
## $options$help
## [1] FALSE
##
## $options$verbose
## [1] TRUE
##
## $options$count
## [1] 25
##
##
## $args
## [1] "75" "22"

The function parse_args2 wraps parse_args while setting positional_arguments=TRUE and convert_hyphens_to_underscores=TRUE:

parse_args2(parser, args = c("-vc", "25", "75", "22"))
## $options
## $options$help
## [1] FALSE
##
## $options$verbose
## [1] TRUE
##
## $options$count
## [1] 25
##
##
## $args
## [1] "75" "22"