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author | agc <agc> | 2002-10-28 13:09:08 +0000 |
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committer | agc <agc> | 2002-10-28 13:09:08 +0000 |
commit | 8bfb11e053c9d9e4e12e611a5129f82da9b64202 (patch) | |
tree | 2c3a7c6653af99cf834806c7723433bab821a4e7 /chat/aim | |
parent | deb211ca5972e1008a7b97b98d089872f4b9bba6 (diff) | |
download | pkgsrc-8bfb11e053c9d9e4e12e611a5129f82da9b64202.tar.gz |
Initial import of libargparse-0.1.0000 into the NetBSD Packages Collection.
libargparse is a command line argument parser library in C++
The ArgParse class allows you to specify names of options that you
want parsed, along with a usage message for them. Options come in
four flavors: flag, int, float, and string. Flags don't take
arguments, but the other kinds do. For an option that takes an
argument, it can be specified with an equals sign, with a colon, or by
putting it in the next element of argv. ("--foo=stuff",
"--foo:stuff", or "--foo stuff", respectively)
The flavors that take arguments also come in array flavors. With an
array, you specify a pointer to a vector of the basic type, instead of
just a pointer to a basic type. This allows the option to appear more
than once, and the new values are appended to the array. Optionally,
you can also specify a separator character, so that multiple array
elements can be parsed up from a single instance of the option.
Options can start with either a single dash or a double dash, but see
allowOneCharOptionsToBeCombined() for more information.
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