I'm currently working with boost::program_options
. My program is supposed to take as arguments (amongst other things...) an arbitrary number of 'lists' of arbitrary length. For example, the user should be able to call
./myprogram -list item1 item2 item3 -list item1 item2 -list item1 item2
Obviously, I don't want to get one list/vector with all the items one after the other as a result, but (in this case) three lists/vectors (or, for example, one vector of vectors containing the elements) with two or three items per list (each item is supposed to be a string, but I guess this doesn't matter).
As I said before, the number of lists (as well as the number of items per list!) should be arbitrary.
How can I do that with boost::program_options
?
This can be done without a whole lot of extra code. The secret is to separate the parsing step from the storage step, as also done in this answer.
The parser will return a container of key/value structs as the options are presented from the user. If an option is submitted multiple times then the container will have a separate entry for each option submission. It is quite straightforward to scan for a particular option and organize its values however we want.
Here's an example that prints out each input multi-token option on a separate line:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include <boost/program_options.hpp>
namespace po = boost::program_options;
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
// Define a multi-token option.
po::options_description desc("Allowed options");
desc.add_options()
("list", po::value<std::vector<std::string>>()->multitoken(), "multiple values");
// Just parse the options without storing them in a map.
po::parsed_options parsed_options = po::command_line_parser(argc, argv)
.options(desc)
.run();
// Build list of multi-valued option instances. We iterate through
// each command-line option, whether it is repeated or not. We
// accumulate the values for our multi-valued option in a
// container.
std::vector<std::vector<std::string>> lists;
for (const po::option& o : parsed_options.options) {
if (o.string_key == "list")
lists.push_back(o.value);
}
// If we had other normal options, we would store them in a map
// here. In this demo program it isn't really necessary because
// we are only interested in our special multi-valued option.
po::variables_map vm;
po::store(parsed_options, vm);
// Print out the multi-valued option, each separate instance on its
// own line.
for (size_t i = 0; i < lists.size(); ++i) {
for (size_t j = 0; j < lists[i].size(); ++j)
std::cout << lists[i][j] << ' ';
std::cout << '\n';
}
return 0;
}
And here's a sample invocation (live at coliru):
$ ./po --list 1 2 3 --list foo bar --list how now brown cow
1 2 3
foo bar
how now brown cow
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