Command And Conquer is a JavaScript library for building CLI apps.
Features
Super light-weight: No dependency, just a single file.
Easy to learn. There're only 4 APIs you need to learn for building simple CLIs: cli.optioncli.versioncli.helpcli.parse.
Yet so powerful. Enable features like default command, git-like subcommands, validation for required arguments and options, variadic arguments, dot-nested options, automated help message generation and so on.
// examples/basic-usage.jsconstcli=require('cac')()cli.option('--type <type>','Choose a project type',{default: 'node',})constparsed=cli.parse()console.log(JSON.stringify(parsed,null,2))
Display Help Message and Version
// examples/help.jsconstcli=require('cac')()cli.option('--type [type]','Choose a project type',{default: 'node',})cli.option('--name <name>','Provide your name')cli.command('lint [...files]','Lint files').action((files,options)=>{console.log(files,options)})// Display help message when `-h` or `--help` appearscli.help()// Display version number when `-v` or `--version` appears// It's also used in help messagecli.version('0.0.0')cli.parse()
A command's options are validated when the command is used. Any unknown options will be reported as an error. However, if an action-based command does not define an action, then the options are not validated. If you really want to use unknown options, use command.allowUnknownOptions.
Dash in option names
Options in kebab-case should be referenced in camelCase in your code:
cli.command('dev','Start dev server').option('--clear-screen','Clear screen').action((options)=>{console.log(options.clearScreen)})
In fact --clear-screen and --clearScreen are both mapped to options.clearScreen.
Brackets
When using brackets in command name, angled brackets indicate required command arguments, while square bracket indicate optional arguments.
When using brackets in option name, angled brackets indicate that a string / number value is required, while square bracket indicate that the value can also be true.
constcli=require('cac')()cli.command('deploy <folder>','Deploy a folder to AWS').option('--scale [level]','Scaling level').action((folder,options)=>{// ...})cli.command('build [project]','Build a project').option('--out <dir>','Output directory').action((folder,options)=>{// ...})cli.parse()
Negated Options
To allow an option whose value is false, you need to manually specify a negated option:
cli.command('build [project]','Build a project').option('--no-config','Disable config file').option('--config <path>','Use a custom config file')
This will let CAC set the default value of config to true, and you can use --no-config flag to set it to false.
Variadic Arguments
The last argument of a command can be variadic, and only the last argument. To make an argument variadic you have to add ... to the start of argument name, just like the rest operator in JavaScript. Here is an example:
constcli=require('cac')()cli.command('build <entry> [...otherFiles]','Build your app').option('--foo','Foo option').action((entry,otherFiles,options)=>{console.log(entry)console.log(otherFiles)console.log(options)})cli.help()cli.parse()
Dot-nested Options
Dot-nested options will be merged into a single option.
Register a command that will be used when no other command is matched.
constcli=require('cac')()cli// Simply omit the command name, just brackets.command('[...files]','Build files').option('--minimize','Minimize output').action((files,options)=>{console.log(files)console.log(options.minimize)})cli.parse()
Supply an array as option value
node cli.js --include project-a
# The parsed options will be:# { include: 'project-a' }
node cli.js --include project-a --include project-b
# The parsed options will be:# { include: ['project-a', 'project-b'] }
Error Handling
To handle command errors globally:
try{// Parse CLI args without running the commandcli.parse(process.argv,{run: false})// Run the command yourself// You only need `await` when your command action returns a Promiseawaitcli.runMatchedCommand()}catch(error){// Handle error here..// e.g.// console.error(error.stack)// process.exit(1)}
With TypeScript
First you need @types/node to be installed as a dev dependency in your project:
yarn add @types/node --dev
Then everything just works out of the box:
const{ cac }=require('cac')// OR ES modulesimport{cac}from'cac'
💁 Check out the generated docs from source code if you want a more in-depth API references.
Below is a brief overview.
CLI Instance
CLI instance is created by invoking the cac function:
constcac=require('cac')constcli=cac()
cac(name?)
Create a CLI instance, optionally specify the program name which will be used to display in help and version message. When not set we use the basename of argv[1].
The option also accepts a third argument config for additional option config:
config.default: Default value for the option.
config.type: any[] When set to [], the option value returns an array type. You can also use a conversion function such as [String], which will invoke the option value with String.
Add a global usage text. This is not used by sub-commands.
Command Instance
Command instance is created by invoking the cli.command method:
constcommand=cli.command('build [...files]','Build given files')
command.option()
Basically the same as cli.option but this adds the option to specific command.
command.action(callback)
Type: (callback: ActionCallback) => Command
Use a callback function as the command action when the command matches user inputs.
typeActionCallback=(// Parsed CLI args// The last arg will be an array if it's a variadic argument
...args: string|string[]|number|number[]// Parsed CLI optionsoptions: Options)=>anyinterfaceOptions{[k: string]: any}
command.alias(name)
Type: (name: string) => Command
Add an alias name to this command, the name here can't contain brackets.
command.allowUnknownOptions()
Type: () => Command
Allow unknown options in this command, by default CAC will log an error when unknown options are used.
command.example(example)
Type: (example: CommandExample) => Command
Add an example which will be displayed at the end of help message.
// Listen to the `foo` commandcli.on('command:foo',()=>{// Do something})// Listen to the default commandcli.on('command:!',()=>{// Do something})// Listen to unknown commandscli.on('command:*',()=>{console.error('Invalid command: %s',cli.args.join(' '))process.exit(1)})
FAQ
How is the name written and pronounced?
CAC, or cac, pronounced C-A-C.
This project is dedicated to our lovely C.C. sama. Maybe CAC stands for C&C as well :P
Why not use Commander.js?
CAC is very similar to Commander.js, while the latter does not support dot nested options, i.e. something like --env.API_SECRET foo. Besides, you can't use unknown options in Commander.js either.
And maybe more...
Basically I made CAC to fulfill my own needs for building CLI apps like Poi, SAO and all my CLI apps. It's small, simple but powerful :P
Project Stats
Contributing
Fork it!
Create your feature branch: git checkout -b my-new-feature
Commit your changes: git commit -am 'Add some feature'
Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
cacjs/cac
Introduction
Command And Conquer is a JavaScript library for building CLI apps.
Features
cli.option
cli.version
cli.help
cli.parse
.Table of Contents
Install
Usage
Simple Parsing
Use CAC as simple argument parser:
Display Help Message and Version
Command-specific Options
You can attach options to a command.
A command's options are validated when the command is used. Any unknown options will be reported as an error. However, if an action-based command does not define an action, then the options are not validated. If you really want to use unknown options, use
command.allowUnknownOptions
.Dash in option names
Options in kebab-case should be referenced in camelCase in your code:
In fact
--clear-screen
and--clearScreen
are both mapped tooptions.clearScreen
.Brackets
When using brackets in command name, angled brackets indicate required command arguments, while square bracket indicate optional arguments.
When using brackets in option name, angled brackets indicate that a string / number value is required, while square bracket indicate that the value can also be
true
.Negated Options
To allow an option whose value is
false
, you need to manually specify a negated option:This will let CAC set the default value of
config
to true, and you can use--no-config
flag to set it tofalse
.Variadic Arguments
The last argument of a command can be variadic, and only the last argument. To make an argument variadic you have to add
...
to the start of argument name, just like the rest operator in JavaScript. Here is an example:Dot-nested Options
Dot-nested options will be merged into a single option.
Default Command
Register a command that will be used when no other command is matched.
Supply an array as option value
Error Handling
To handle command errors globally:
With TypeScript
First you need
@types/node
to be installed as a dev dependency in your project:Then everything just works out of the box:
With Deno
Projects Using CAC
Projects that use CAC:
References
Below is a brief overview.
CLI Instance
CLI instance is created by invoking the
cac
function:cac(name?)
Create a CLI instance, optionally specify the program name which will be used to display in help and version message. When not set we use the basename of
argv[1]
.cli.command(name, description, config?)
(name: string, description: string) => Command
Create a command instance.
The option also accepts a third argument
config
for additional command config:config.allowUnknownOptions
:boolean
Allow unknown options in this command.config.ignoreOptionDefaultValue
:boolean
Don't use the options's default value in parsed options, only display them in help message.cli.option(name, description, config?)
(name: string, description: string, config?: OptionConfig) => CLI
Add a global option.
The option also accepts a third argument
config
for additional option config:config.default
: Default value for the option.config.type
:any[]
When set to[]
, the option value returns an array type. You can also use a conversion function such as[String]
, which will invoke the option value withString
.cli.parse(argv?)
(argv = process.argv) => ParsedArgv
When this method is called,
cli.rawArgs
cli.args
cli.options
cli.matchedCommand
will also be available.cli.version(version, customFlags?)
(version: string, customFlags = '-v, --version') => CLI
Output version number when
-v, --version
flag appears.cli.help(callback?)
(callback?: HelpCallback) => CLI
Output help message when
-h, --help
flag appears.Optional
callback
allows post-processing of help text before it is displayed:cli.outputHelp()
() => CLI
Output help message.
cli.usage(text)
(text: string) => CLI
Add a global usage text. This is not used by sub-commands.
Command Instance
Command instance is created by invoking the
cli.command
method:command.option()
Basically the same as
cli.option
but this adds the option to specific command.command.action(callback)
(callback: ActionCallback) => Command
Use a callback function as the command action when the command matches user inputs.
command.alias(name)
(name: string) => Command
Add an alias name to this command, the
name
here can't contain brackets.command.allowUnknownOptions()
() => Command
Allow unknown options in this command, by default CAC will log an error when unknown options are used.
command.example(example)
(example: CommandExample) => Command
Add an example which will be displayed at the end of help message.
command.usage(text)
(text: string) => Command
Add a usage text for this command.
Events
Listen to commands:
FAQ
How is the name written and pronounced?
CAC, or cac, pronounced
C-A-C
.This project is dedicated to our lovely C.C. sama. Maybe CAC stands for C&C as well :P
Why not use Commander.js?
CAC is very similar to Commander.js, while the latter does not support dot nested options, i.e. something like
--env.API_SECRET foo
. Besides, you can't use unknown options in Commander.js either.And maybe more...
Basically I made CAC to fulfill my own needs for building CLI apps like Poi, SAO and all my CLI apps. It's small, simple but powerful :P
Project Stats
Contributing
git checkout -b my-new-feature
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
git push origin my-new-feature
Author
CAC © EGOIST, Released under the MIT License.
Authored and maintained by egoist with help from contributors (list).