With the Symfony3 Console, how can I tell when a user supplied an option, but supplied it without a value? As opposed to not supplying the option at all?
As an example, take the following console configuration.
<?php
class MyCommand extends \Symfony\Component\Console\Command\Command
{
// ...
protected function configure()
{
$this->setName('test')
->setDescription('update an existing operation.')
->addOption(
'option',
null,
InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL,
'The ID of the operation to update.'
);
}
}
The command help will illustrate the option as --option[=OPTION], so I can call this the following ways.
bin/console test
bin/console test --option
bin/console test --option=foo
However, $input->getOption() will return NULL in the first two cases. I expected in the second case that it would return TRUE, or something to indicate the option was supplied.
So I don't know how to identify the difference the option not being supplied at all, and it being supplied but without a value.
If there is no way to tell the difference, what is the use-case for InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL?
You're combining two things together. Option with no value InputOption::VALUE_NONE and an option with an optional value InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL.
The documentation says: http://symfony.com/doc/current/console/input.html
There is nothing forbidding you to create a command with an option that optionally accepts a value. However, there is no way you can distinguish when the option was used without a value (command --language) or when it wasn't used at all (command). In both cases, the value retrieved for the option will be null.
This describes exactly your case.
You can't distinguish when a parameter wasn't passed at all or was passed but with no value. That's what InputOption::VALUE_NONE was made for.
Depending on your usecase you can supply a default value for a parameter which will be used in console test and console test --option cases.
Also note, that addOption takes as an argument a shortcut as the second argument.
public function addOption($name, $shortcut = null, $mode = null, $description = '', $default = null)
Since Symfony 3.4, you can just set the default to false and check:
false the option doesn't existnull the option exists without a valuee.g.
$this->addOption('force', null, InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL, 'Force something', false);
$force = $input->getOption('force') !== false;
Edit on 6/10/21: This only applies to Symfony 3.3 and below. The correct answer is now the one provided by ScorpioT1000
After poking around in Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputInterface, I discovered the getParameterOption() method which provides the ability to differentiate between an option not used, an option used without a value, and an option used with a value.
In the command's configure() method:
$this->addOption('test', null, InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL);
In the command's execute() method:
$test = $input->getOption('test'); $rawTest = $input->getParameterOption('--test');
Produces the following values for the given command lines:
> bin/console some:cmd
$test => null
$rawTest => false
> bin/console some:cmd --test
$test => null
$rawTest => null
> bin/console some:cmd --test=something
$test => "something"
$rawTest => "something"
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