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The structure srfi-37 implements "args-fold: a program option
processor". Here are details (from the srfi document):
ABSTRACT
Many operating systems make the set of argument strings used to invoke
a program available (often following the program name string in an
array called argv). Most programs need to parse and process these
argument strings in one way or another. This SRFI describes a set of
procedures that support processing program arguments according to
POSIX and GNU C Library Reference Manual guidelines.
RATIONALE
Program arguments are the primary interface to many programs, so
processing arguments is a common programming task. There are many
common (often conflicting) ways take care of this task, so a custom
processor is often necessary; however, many programmers (and their
users) would welcome a convenient interface supporting common
guidelines [1]. POSIX provides several guidelines for the
specification of program options, option-arguments, and operands. It
also notes historical exceptions to these guidelines. The GNU C
Library Reference Manual describes [2] long option extensions to the
POSIX guidelines.
This SRFI supports creating programs following the guidelines
mentioned above by
* parsing short-options and long-options in any order and possibly
repeated,
* option-arguments (possibly required or forbidden),
* operands (non-option argument strings),
* and recognizing option processing termination.
It parses argument strings according to the following rules:
* Each short-option name is a single character.
* One or more short-options are accepted in a single argument string
when grouped behind one -- delimiter character. Examples: -a -bcd
* A short-option-argument is accepted in a separate argument string
immediately following a short-option. Examples: -a foo -bcd bar
* Also (for historical reasons) a short-option-argument is accepted
immediately following the last short-option in a single argument
string. Examples: -afoo -bcdbar
* Each long-option name is one or more characters.
* One long-option is accepted in a single argument string when
preceded by two - delimiter characters. Example: --help
* In a single argument string, a long-option followed by one =
delimiter character followed by a long-option-argument is
accepted. Example: --speed=fast
* The first -- argument string is accepted as a delimiter indicating
the end of options. It is not treated as an option or an
operand. Any argument strings following this delimiter are treated
as operands, even if they begin with the - character.
* All other argument strings are treated as operands. This includes
argument strings consisting of a single - character.
* Operands may be intermingled with options in any order.
SPECIFICATION
Args-fold is an iterator similar to SRFI-1's fold procedure ("the
fundamental list iterator"). As it parses options and operands, it
calls their corresponding operand and option processors. Unlike
mapping, folding passes state, called seeds, from one processor to the
next. For example, a program may need a list of operands and a table
of options. To build these, args-fold could be seeded with an empty
operand list, and an empty option table. The operand processor could
add the operands to the operand list, and the option processors could
add the options to the option table. Along the way, some option
processors might even take immediate action for options like --version
or --help. This kind of heterogeneous processing is appropriate for
program arguments, and folding allows a functional implementation if
desired.
procedure prototype: (option-processor OPTION NAME ARG SEEDS ...)
Prototype for an option-processor. It should return the next seeds as
values. OPTION will be the option. NAME will be one of the OPTION's
option-names as encountered by args-fold. ARG will be a string, or #f
if args-fold didn't encounter an option-argument.
procedure prototype: (operand-processor OPERAND SEEDS ...)
Prototype for an operand-processor. It should return the next seeds as
values. OPERAND will be a string.
procedure: (option NAMES REQUIRED-ARG? OPTIONAL-ARG? OPTION-PROC)
Return an option. NAMES is a list of short (character) and long
(string) option names. REQUIRED-ARG? specifies if this options
requires an option-argument (boolean). OPTIONAL-ARG? specifies if this
option can accept an option-argument (boolean). OPTION-PROC is a
procedure (following the option-processor prototype) used to process
this option.
procedure: (option-names OPTION)
procedure: (option-required-arg? OPTION)
procedure: (option-optional-arg? OPTION)
procedure: (option-processor OPTION)
Return the contents of corresponding fields of OPTION.
procedure: (args-fold ARGS OPTIONS UNRECOGNIZED-OPTION-PROC
OPERAND-PROC SEEDS ...)
Parse argument strings left-to-right, calling the appropriate
processors in- order (for the parsed known options, unknown options,
and operands), passing the seed values from one processor to the next
and returning the final seeds values as results. ARGS is a list of
strings. OPTIONS is a list of options. UNRECOGNIZED-OPTION-PROC is a
procedure (following the option-processor prototype) for unrecognized
options. NOTE: args-fold will create temporary options as necessary
for the UNRECOGNIZED-OPTION-PROC. OPERAND-PROC is a procedure
(following the operand-processor prototype) for operands.
[1] http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/basedefs/xbd_chap12.html#tag_12_02
[2] http://www.gnu.org/manual/glibc/html_node/Argument-Syntax.html