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Ookii.CommandLine enables comprehensive command line argument parsing for .Net applications. It allows you to easily define required, optional, positional and named arguments, parse the command line, and generate usage information.

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Ookii.CommandLine

Ookii.CommandLine enables comprehensive command line argument parsing for .Net applications. It allows you to easily define required, optional, positional and named arguments, parse the command line, and generate usage information. It is provided in versions for .Net Framework 2.0 and later, .Net Standard 2.0, and .Net 6.0 and later.

Ookii.CommandLine can be added to your project in Visual Studio via NuGet. Code snippets are available on the Visual Studio marketplace.

Overview

Ookii.CommandLine is a library that helps you to parse command line arguments for your applications. It allows you to easily define a set of accepted arguments, and then parse the command line supplied to your application for those arguments. In addition, it allows you to generate usage help from the arguments that you defined which you can display to the user.

Ookii.CommandLine can be used with any kind of .Net application, whether Console, Windows Forms, or WPF. Although a limited subset of functionality – particularly related around generating usage help text – is geared primarily towards console applications that are invoked from the command prompt, the main command line parsing functionality is usable in any application that needs to process command line arguments.

To define a set of command line arguments, you create a class that will hold their values. The constructor parameters and properties of that class determine the set of arguments that are accepted. Attributes can be used to specify things such as the argument name and whether or not an argument is required, and to specify descriptions used to customize the usage help.

Command line parsing is done in a way that is similar to that used by Windows PowerShell. Each argument has a name, and can be supplied by name on the command line. An argument can also be positional, in which case it can be supplied without the name. Arguments can be required or optional, and there is support for switch arguments (which don't need a value but are either present or not) and arguments with multiple values. Various aspects of the parsing, such as the argument name prefix (typically a / or a -), can be customized.

For example, the following class defines four arguments: a required positional argument, an optional positional argument, a named argument, and a switch argument:

class MyArguments
{
    [CommandLineArgument(Position = 0, IsRequired = true)]
    public string RequiredArgument { get; set; }
    [CommandLineArgument(Position = 1)]
    public int OptionalArgument { get; set; }
    [CommandLineArgument]
    public DateTime NamedArgument { get; set; }
    [CommandLineArgument]
    public bool SwitchArgument { get; set; }
}

The application using these arguments would have the following usage syntax (this kind of usage help can be generated by Ookii.CommandLine, and can be customized to include argument descriptions):

Usage: MyApplication.exe [-RequiredArgument] <String> [[-OptionalArgument] <Number>] [-NamedArgument <DateTime>] [-SwitchArgument]

An example invocation of this application, specifying all the arguments, would look like this:

MyApplication.exe foo 42 -SwitchArgument -NamedArgument 2019-08-14

In addition, Ookii.CommandLine can be used to create command line utilities that perform multiple operations, each with their own arguments (these are called ShellCommands in Ookii.CommandLine).

Please check out the following to get started:

About

Ookii.CommandLine enables comprehensive command line argument parsing for .Net applications. It allows you to easily define required, optional, positional and named arguments, parse the command line, and generate usage information.

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