(nothing yet)
[issue #30] Change the output used by dashdash’s Bash completion support to indicate “there are no completions for this argument” to cope with different sorting rules on different Bash/platforms. For example:
$ triton -v -p test2 package get <TAB> # before
##-no -tritonpackage- completions-##
$ triton -v -p test2 package get <TAB> # after
##-no-completion- -results-##
New synopsisFromOpt(<option spec>)
function. This will be used by
node-cmdln to put together a synopsis
of options for a command. Some examples:
> synopsisFromOpt({names: ['help', 'h'], type: 'bool'});
'[ --help | -h ]'
> synopsisFromOpt({name: 'file', type: 'string', helpArg: 'FILE'});
'[ --file=FILE ]'
bashCompletionSpecFromOptions
breaks on an options array with
an empty-string group.Update assert-plus dep to 1.x to get recent fixes (particularly for
assert.optional*
).
Drop testing (and official support in packages.json#engines) for node 0.8.x.
Add testing against node 5.x and 4.x with make testall
.
[pull #16] Change the positiveInteger
type to NOT accept zero (0).
For those who might need the old behaviour, see
“examples/custom-option-intGteZero.js”. (By Dave Pacheco.)
Bash completion: Add argtypes
to specify the types of positional args.
E.g. this would allow you to have an ssh
command with argtypes = ['host',
'cmd']
for bash completion. You then have to provide Bash functions to
handle completing those types via the specExtra
arg. See
“examples/ddcompletion.js” for an example.
Bash completion: Tweak so that options or only offered as completions when
there is a leading ‘-’. E.g. mytool <TAB>
does NOT offer options, mytool
-<TAB>
does. Without this, a tool with options would never be able to
fallback to Bash’s “default” completion. For example ls <TAB>
wouldn’t
result in filename completion. Now it will.
Bash completion: A workaround for not being able to explicitly have no
completion results. Because dashdash’s completion uses complete -o default
,
we fallback to Bash’s “default” completion (typically for filename
completion). Before this change, an attempt to explicitly say “there are
no completions that match” would unintentionally trigger filename completion.
Instead as a workaround we return:
$ ddcompletion --none <TAB> # the 'none' argtype
##-no completions-##
$ ddcompletion # a custom 'fruit' argtype
apple banana orange
$ ddcompletion z
##-no -fruit- completions-##
This is a bit of a hack, but IMO a better experience than the surprise of matching a local filename beginning with ‘z’, which isn’t, in this case, a “fruit”.
<option spec>.completionType
. Add includeHidden
option to bashCompletionSpecFromOptions()
. Add support for dealing with
hidden subcmds.Add the arrayFlatten
boolean option to dashdash.addOptionType
used for
custom option types. This allows one to create an arrayOf...
option type
where each usage of the option can return multiple results. For example:
node mytool.js --foo a,b --foo c
We could define an option type for --foo
such that
opts.foo = ['a', 'b', 'c']
. See
“examples/custom-option-arrayOfCommaSepString.js“
for an example.
npm
won’t let me drop the README.md. :)includeDefault
in help config (similar to includeEnv
) to have a
note of an option’s default value, if any, in help output.addOptionType
can specify a
“default” value. See “examples/custom-option-fruit.js”.hidden: true
in an option spec to have help output exclude this
option.[issue #8] Fix parsing of a short option group when one of the
option takes an argument. For example, consider tail
with
a -f
boolean option and a -n
option that takes a number
argument. This should parse:
tail -fn5
Before this change, that would not parse correctly.
It is suspected that this was introduced in version 1.4.0
(with commit 656fa8bc71
).
Known issues: #8
Exclude ‘tools/’ dir in packages published to npm.
Known issues: #8
Support an option group empty string value:
...
{ group: '' },
...
to render as a blank line in option help. This can help separate loosely related sets of options without resorting to a title for option groups.
Known issues: #8
[pull #7] Support for <parser>.help({helpWrap: false, ...})
option to be able
to fully control the formatting for option help (by Patrick Mooney) helpWrap:
false
can also be set on individual options in the option objects, e.g.:
var options = [
{
names: ['foo'],
type: 'string',
helpWrap: false,
help: 'long help with\n newlines' +
'\n spaces\n and such\nwill render correctly'
},
...
];
Known issues: #8
[pull #6] Support headings between groups of options (by Joshua M. Clulow) so that this code:
var options = [
{ group: 'Armament Options' },
{ names: [ 'weapon', 'w' ], type: 'string' },
{ group: 'General Options' },
{ names: [ 'help', 'h' ], type: 'bool' }
];
...
will give you this help output:
...
Armament Options:
-w, --weapon
General Options:
-h, --help
...
Known issues: #8
Add support for adding custom option types. “examples/custom-option-duration.js” shows an example adding a “duration” option type.
$ node custom-option-duration.js -t 1h
duration: 3600000 ms
$ node custom-option-duration.js -t 1s
duration: 1000 ms
$ node custom-option-duration.js -t 5d
duration: 432000000 ms
$ node custom-option-duration.js -t bogus
custom-option-duration.js: error: arg for "-t" is not a valid duration: "bogus"
A custom option type is added via:
var dashdash = require('dashdash');
dashdash.addOptionType({
name: '...',
takesArg: true,
helpArg: '...',
parseArg: function (option, optstr, arg) {
...
}
});
[issue #4] Add date
and arrayOfDate
option types. They accept these date
formats: epoch second times (e.g. 1396031701
) and ISO 8601 format:
YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM:SS[.sss][Z]]
(e.g. “2014-03-28”,
“2014-03-28T18:35:01.489Z”). See “examples/date.js” for an example usage.
$ node examples/date.js -s 2014-01-01 -e $(date +%s)
start at 2014-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
end at 2014-03-29T04:26:18.000Z
Known issues: #8
[pull #2, pull #3] Add a allowUnknown: true
option on createParser
to
allow unknown options to be passed through as opts._args
instead of parsing
throwing an exception (by https://github.com/isaacs).
See ‘allowUnknown’ in the README for a subtle caveat.
Fix a subtlety where a bool option using both env
and default
didn’t
work exactly correctly. If default: false
then all was fine (by luck).
However, if you had an option like this:
options: [ {
names: ['verbose', 'v'],
env: 'FOO_VERBOSE',
'default': true, // <--- this
type: 'bool'
} ],
wanted FOO_VERBOSE=0
to make the option false, then you need the fix
in this version of dashdash.
[issue #1] Fix an envvar not winning over an option ‘default’. Previously
an option with both default
and env
would never take a value from the
environment variable. E.g. FOO_FILE
would never work here:
options: [ {
names: ['file', 'f'],
env: 'FOO_FILE',
'default': 'default.file',
type: 'string'
} ],
[Backward incompatible change for boolean envvars] Change the interpretation of environment variables for boolean options to consider ‘0’ to be false. Previous to this any value to the envvar was considered true -- which was quite misleading. Example:
$ FOO_VERBOSE=0 node examples/foo.js
# opts: { verbose: [ false ],
_order: [ { key: 'verbose', value: false, from: 'env' } ],
_args: [] }
# args: []
Fix for parse.help({includeEnv: true, ...})
handling to ensure that an
option with an env
but no help
still has the “Environment: …”
output. E.g.:
{ names: ['foo'], type: 'string', env: 'FOO' }
...
--foo=ARG Environment: FOO=ARG
opts
object returned from
<parser>.parse()
for convenience. Currently this is just
s/-/_/g
, e.g. ‘--dry-run’ -> opts.dry_run
. This allow one to use hyphen
in option names (common) but not have to do silly things like
opt["dry-run"]
to access the parsed results.Environment variable integration. Envvars can be associated with an option, then option processing will fallback to using that envvar if defined and if the option isn’t specified in argv. See the “Environment variable integration” section in the README.
Change the <parser>.parse()
signature to take a single object with keys
for arguments. The old signature is still supported.
dashdash.createParser(CONFIG)
alternative to new dashdash.Parser(CONFIG)
a la many node-land APIs.
Add “positiveInteger” and “arrayOfPositiveInteger” option types that only accept positive integers.
Add “integer” and “arrayOfInteger” option types that accepts only integers. Note that, for better or worse, these do NOT accept: “0x42” (hex), “1e2” (with exponent) or “1.”, “3.0” (floats).
First release.