DeclarativeCommandLine 1.0.0-build-3-202411281732

This is a prerelease version of DeclarativeCommandLine.
There is a newer prerelease version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package DeclarativeCommandLine --version 1.0.0-build-3-202411281732                
NuGet\Install-Package DeclarativeCommandLine -Version 1.0.0-build-3-202411281732                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="DeclarativeCommandLine" Version="1.0.0-build-3-202411281732" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add DeclarativeCommandLine --version 1.0.0-build-3-202411281732                
#r "nuget: DeclarativeCommandLine, 1.0.0-build-3-202411281732"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install DeclarativeCommandLine as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=DeclarativeCommandLine&version=1.0.0-build-3-202411281732&prerelease

// Install DeclarativeCommandLine as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=DeclarativeCommandLine&version=1.0.0-build-3-202411281732&prerelease                

Declarative Command Line

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Attribute-driven layer on top of System.CommandLine to make the most common use cases easier to set up.

Minimalistic Example

The very smallest a command can be:

using DeclarativeCommandLine;

[Command]
public class AddNumbersCommand : ICommand
{
	[Option]
	public int NumberA { get; set; }

	[Option]
	public int NumberB { get; set; }

	public void Execute()
	{
		Console.WriteLine($"{NumberA} + {NumberB} = {NumberA + NumberB}");
	}
}

Contents

Commands

TODO:

  • Name
  • Aliases
  • Description
  • IsHidden
  • Parent
  • TreatUnmatchedTokensAsErrors
public class MyCommand
{

}

Arguments

[Command]
public class MyCommand
{
	[Argument]
	public string MyArgument { get; set; }
}

TODO:

  • Name
  • Description
  • DefaultValue
  • ArgumentArity Arity
  • Completions
  • FromAmong
  • HelpName
  • IsHidden
  • LegalFileNamesOnly
  • LegalFilePathsOnly

Options

[Command]
public class MyCommand
{
	[Option]
	public string MyOption { get; set; }
}

TODO:

  • Name
  • Aliases
  • DefaultValue
  • Description
  • ArgumentHelpName
  • AllowMultipleArgumentsPerToken
  • ArgumentArity Arity
  • Completions
  • FromAmong
  • IsRequired
  • IsGlobal
  • IsHidden
  • LegalFileNamesOnly
  • LegalFilePathsOnly

Command Handlers

TODO

[RootCommand]
public class AppRootCommand
{
	[CommandHandler]
	public void Handle()
	{
	}
}

Command Builders

TODO

[RootCommand]
public class AppRootCommand
{
	[CommandBuilder]
	public void Handle(System.CommandLine.Command command)
	{
	}
}

Command Inheritance

TODO

Dependency Injection

TODO

Root Command

Generally, an app has exactly 1 "root command", which handles the case where no explicit command is specified.

For example, with an argument:

my-app.exe C:/path/to/file.txt

With an option:

my-app.exe --verbose

Cases like these are handled through the root command. If no root command is defined, an empty default root command is used, to cut down on boilerplate.

But one can be defined explicitly, like this:

[RootCommand]
public class AppRootCommand
{
	[Argument]
	public string MyFirstArgument { get; set; }

	[Option]
	public bool Verbose { get; set; }
}

Command Hierarchy

Commands can be arranged in a hierarchy, to add structure and share arguments and options.

Here's a couple example commands that illustrate the concept.

my-app.exe file create my-file.txt
my-app.exe dir create my-dir

We could define the commands as:

[Command("file")]
public class FileCommand
{
}
[Command("create", Parent = typeof(FileCommand))]
public class CreateFileCommand
{
	[Argument]
	public string FileName { get; set; }

	[CommandHandler]
	public void Handle()
	{
		File.WriteAllText(FileName, string.Empty);
	}
}
[Command("dir")]
public class DirCommand
{
}
[Command("create", Parent = typeof(DirCommand))]
public class CreateDirCommand
{
	[Argument]
	public string DirName { get; set; }

	[CommandHandler]
	public void Handle()
	{
		Directory.CreateDirectory(DirName);
	}
}

We can now add more commands under these, for example:

[Command("current", Parent = typeof(DirCommand))]
public class CurrentDirCommand
{
	[CommandHandler]
	public void Handle()
	{
		Console.WriteLine($"CURRENT: {Directory.GetCurrentDirectory()}");
	}
}
my-app.exe dir current
CURRENT: C:\path\to\net6.0

Automatic Naming

TODO

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

NuGet packages

This package is not used by any NuGet packages.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.0.0-master-02150034 128 2/15/2023
1.0.0-master-02061124 229 2/6/2023
1.0.0-master-02040018 108 2/3/2023
1.0.0-master-02032358 103 2/3/2023
1.0.0-master-02032349 103 2/3/2023
1.0.0-master-02032327 107 2/3/2023
1.0.0-master-02032211 113 2/3/2023
1.0.0-build-3-202411281732 33 11/28/2024
1.0.0-build-1-02032055 103 2/3/2023

1.0.0 Initial release