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MGR.CommandLineParser is a multi-command line parser. It uses System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations to declare and validate the commands.

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MGR.Commandlineparser

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MGR.CommandLineParser MyGet package version Number of MyGet downloads
MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.Lambda MyGet package version Number of MyGet downloads
MGR.CommandLineParser.Hosting MyGet package version Number of MyGet downloads

Nuget:

MGR.CommandLineParser NuGet package version Number of NuGet downloads
MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.Lambda NuGet package version Number of NuGet downloads
MGR.CommandLineParser.Hosting NuGet package version Number of NuGet downloads

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MGR.CommandLineParser is a multi-command line parser. It uses System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations to declare and validate the commands.

How to use it ?

You can find more docs here

1. Install MGR.CommandLineParser

MGR.CommandLineParser is available through NuGet:

PM> Install-Package MGR.CommandLineParser

2. Declare your own commands

After adding MGR.CommandLineParser to your project, you have to define your own commands:

  • by implementing the interface MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.ICommand;
  • by extending the abstract class MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.CommandBase.

To personnalize your commands, you add some properties to your class, and implement Execute (if you directly implement ICommand), or override ExecuteCommand (if you override CommandBase).

For example:

via MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.ICommand:

public class HelloWorldCommand : ICommand
{
    [Display(ShortName = "n", Description = "The name to display")]
    [Required]
    public string Name {get; set;}

    public IList<string> Arguments {get; set;}

    public Task<int> ExecuteAsync()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Hello world {0} !", Name);
        if(Arguments.Count > 0)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Arguments: {0}", string.Join(",", Arguments));
        }
        return Task.FromResult(0);
    }
}

Via MGR.CommandLineParser.Command.CommandBase:

public class HelloWorldCommand : CommandBase
{
    [Display(ShortName = "n", Description = "The name to display")]
    [Required]
    public string Name {get; set;}

    protected override Task<int> ExecuteCommandAsync()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Hello world {0} !", Name);
        if(Arguments.Count > 0)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Arguments: {0}", string.Join(",", Arguments));
        }
        return Task.FromResult(0);
    }
}

3. Parse the command line

The simplest way to parse the command line is to call the Parse method on a IParser instance:

var parserBuilder = new ParserBuilder(new ParserOptions())
                .AddCommands(builder => builder.AddCommands<HelloWorldCommand>());
IParser parser = parserBuilder.BuildParser();
CommandResult<ICommand> commandResult = await parser.Parse(args);
if(commandResult.IsValid)
{
    return await commandResult.ExecuteAsync();
}
return commandResult.ReturnCode;

Or if you have define only one command for your program:

var parserBuilder = new ParserBuilder(new ParserOptions())
                .AddCommands(builder => builder.AddCommands<HelloWorldCommand>());
IParser parser = parserBuilder.BuildParser();
CommandResult<HelloWorldCommand> commandResult = await parser.Parse<HelloWorldCommand>(args);
if(commandResult.IsValid)
{
    return await commandResult.ExecuteAsync();
}
return commandResult.ReturnCode;

In the first case, the first item in the args parameter must be the name of the command (the name of the type, minus the suffix Command if present). In the other case, the name of the command should be omitted.

Depending on the value of args, the result will be (when not providing the type of the command to the Parse method):

Value of args Result
null return code is CommandResultCode.NoArgs (-100)
empty enumeration of string return code is CommandResultCode.NoCommandName (-200) and the global help is printed to the console
doesn't begin by HelloWorld or Help (the default help command) return code is CommandResultCode.NoCommandFound (-300) and the global help is printed to the console
HelloWorld return code is CommandResultCode.CommandParameterNotValid (-400) and the help for the HelloWorldCommand is printed to the console
HelloWorld --name Matthias or HelloWorld -n Matthias return code is CommandResultCode.Ok (0) and Hello world Matthias ! is printed to the console

About

MGR.CommandLineParser is a multi-command line parser. It uses System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations to declare and validate the commands.

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