|  | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| build | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| helpers | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| lib | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| locales | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| CHANGELOG.md | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| LICENSE | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| README.md | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| browser.mjs | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| index.cjs | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| index.mjs | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| package.json | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
| yargs | 3 mēneši atpakaļ | |
Yargs be a node.js library fer hearties tryin' ter parse optstrings
Yargs helps you build interactive command line tools, by parsing arguments and generating an elegant user interface.
It gives you:
my-program.js serve --port=5000).a dynamically generated help menu based on your arguments:
mocha [spec..]
Run tests with Mocha
Commands
mocha inspect [spec..]  Run tests with Mocha                         [default]
mocha init <path>       create a client-side Mocha setup at <path>
Rules & Behavior
--allow-uncaught           Allow uncaught errors to propagate        [boolean]
--async-only, -A           Require all tests to use a callback (async) or
                         return a Promise                          [boolean]
bash-completion shortcuts for commands and options.
and tons more.
Stable version:
npm i yargs
Bleeding edge version with the most recent features:
npm i yargs@next
#!/usr/bin/env node
const yargs = require('yargs/yargs')
const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers')
const argv = yargs(hideBin(process.argv)).argv
if (argv.ships > 3 && argv.distance < 53.5) {
  console.log('Plunder more riffiwobbles!')
} else {
  console.log('Retreat from the xupptumblers!')
}
$ ./plunder.js --ships=4 --distance=22
Plunder more riffiwobbles!
$ ./plunder.js --ships 12 --distance 98.7
Retreat from the xupptumblers!
#!/usr/bin/env node
const yargs = require('yargs/yargs')
const { hideBin } = require('yargs/helpers')
yargs(hideBin(process.argv))
  .command('serve [port]', 'start the server', (yargs) => {
    yargs
      .positional('port', {
        describe: 'port to bind on',
        default: 5000
      })
  }, (argv) => {
    if (argv.verbose) console.info(`start server on :${argv.port}`)
    serve(argv.port)
  })
  .option('verbose', {
    alias: 'v',
    type: 'boolean',
    description: 'Run with verbose logging'
  })
  .argv
Run the example above with --help to see the help for the application.
yargs has type definitions at @types/yargs.
npm i @types/yargs --save-dev
See usage examples in docs.
As of v16, yargs supports Deno:
import yargs from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno.ts'
import { Arguments } from 'https://deno.land/x/yargs/deno-types.ts'
yargs(Deno.args)
  .command('download <files...>', 'download a list of files', (yargs: any) => {
    return yargs.positional('files', {
      describe: 'a list of files to do something with'
    })
  }, (argv: Arguments) => {
    console.info(argv)
  })
  .strictCommands()
  .demandCommand(1)
  .argv
As of v16,yargs supports ESM imports:
import yargs from 'yargs'
import { hideBin } from 'yargs/helpers'
yargs(hideBin(process.argv))
  .command('curl <url>', 'fetch the contents of the URL', () => {}, (argv) => {
    console.info(argv)
  })
  .demandCommand(1)
  .argv
See examples of using yargs in the browser in docs.
Having problems? want to contribute? join our community slack.
Libraries in this ecosystem make a best effort to track Node.js' release schedule. Here's a post on why we think this is important.