package flags import ( "strings" ) // Windows uses a front slash for both short and long options. Also it uses // a colon for name/argument delimter. const ( defaultShortOptDelimiter = '/' defaultLongOptDelimiter = "/" defaultNameArgDelimiter = ':' ) func argumentIsOption(arg string) bool { // Windows-style options allow front slash for the option // delimiter. return len(arg) > 0 && (arg[0] == '-' || arg[0] == '/') } // stripOptionPrefix returns the option without the prefix and whether or // not the option is a long option or not. func stripOptionPrefix(optname string) (prefix string, name string, islong bool) { // Determine if the argument is a long option or not. Windows // typically supports both long and short options with a single // front slash as the option delimiter, so handle this situation // nicely. possplit := 0 if strings.HasPrefix(optname, "--") { possplit = 2 islong = true } else if strings.HasPrefix(optname, "-") { possplit = 1 islong = false } else if strings.HasPrefix(optname, "/") { possplit = 1 islong = len(optname) > 2 } return optname[:possplit], optname[possplit:], islong } // splitOption attempts to split the passed option into a name and an argument. // When there is no argument specified, nil will be returned for it. func splitOption(prefix string, option string, islong bool) (string, *string) { if len(option) == 0 { return option, nil } // Windows typically uses a colon for the option name and argument // delimiter while POSIX typically uses an equals. Support both styles, // but don't allow the two to be mixed. That is to say /foo:bar and // --foo=bar are acceptable, but /foo=bar and --foo:bar are not. var pos int if prefix == "/" { pos = strings.Index(option, ":") } else if len(prefix) > 0 { pos = strings.Index(option, "=") } if (islong && pos >= 0) || (!islong && pos == 1) { rest := option[pos+1:] return option[:pos], &rest } return option, nil } // addHelpGroup adds a new group that contains default help parameters. func (c *Command) addHelpGroup(showHelp func() error) *Group { // Windows CLI applications typically use /? for help, so make both // that available as well as the POSIX style h and help. var help struct { ShowHelpWindows func() error `short:"?" description:"Show this help message"` ShowHelpPosix func() error `short:"h" long:"help" description:"Show this help message"` } help.ShowHelpWindows = showHelp help.ShowHelpPosix = showHelp ret, _ := c.AddGroup("Help Options", "", &help) return ret }