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Flag library for node.js

Package Exports

  • flags
  • flags/dist/flags.js

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (flags) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

Node-Flags

A flexible and easy-to-use command-line flag parsing library for Node.js applications.

npm version License: MIT

Features

  • Define flags across multiple files
  • Support for various data types (string, boolean, integer, number, string list, multi-string)
  • Easy-to-use API for defining and accessing flags
  • Customizable flag validation
  • Built-in help text generation

Installation

Install using your favorite package manager:

npm install flags
# or
yarn add flags
# or
pnpm add flags

Usage

Here's a quick example of how to use Node-Flags:

import * as flags from "flags";

// Define flags
flags.defineString("name", "Anonymous", "Your name");
flags.defineInteger("age", 21, "Your age in years");
flags.defineNumber("height", 1.8, "Your height in meters");
flags.defineStringList("pets", [], "List of your pets");
flags.defineMultiString("hobby", [], "Your hobbies");

// Parse command-line arguments
flags.parse();

// Access flag values
const info = [
  `Name: ${flags.get("name")}`,
  `Age: ${flags.get("age")}`,
  `Height: ${flags.get("height")}m`,
  `Pets: ${flags.get("pets").join(", ")}`,
  `Hobbies:\n  ${flags.get("hobby").join("\n  ")}`,
];

console.log(info.join("\n"));

Run your script with flags:

node example.js --name="John Doe" --age=30 --height=1.75 --pets=dog,cat --hobby=reading --hobby=gaming

Defining Flags

Node-Flags provides several methods to define flags:

  • defineString(name, defaultValue, description)
  • defineBoolean(name, defaultValue, description)
  • defineInteger(name, defaultValue, description)
  • defineNumber(name, defaultValue, description)
  • defineStringList(name, defaultValue, description)
  • defineMultiString(name, defaultValue, description)

Each method returns a Flag object that allows further configuration:

flags
  .defineString("api-key")
  .setDefault("your-default-key")
  .setDescription("API key for authentication")
  .setValidator((value) => {
    if (value.length < 10) {
      throw new Error("API key must be at least 10 characters long");
    }
  })
  .setSecret(true);

Passing Flags

  • Use double dashes for flag names: --flagname
  • Separate values with an equal sign or space: --flagname=value or --flagname value
  • Quote complex string values: --message="Hello, World!"
  • Use -- to separate flags from additional arguments: --flag1 value1 -- arg1 arg2

Querying Flag Values

Access flag values using flags.get(flagName) or flags.FLAGS.flagName.get().

Flag objects also provide properties like name, defaultValue, currentValue, and isSet.

Help Text

Node-Flags automatically generates help text. Access it by running your script with the --help flag.

Testing

For testing, you can pass predefined arguments to flags.parse():

flags.parse(["--flag1", "--noflag2", "--flag3=value"]);

Reset flags between test cases:

flags.reset();

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.