Get command line options
Sophisticated command line argument parser
featured command line args parser
POSIX-style getopt()
Standard input/output manager for Node.js
CLI parameter parser to get the named and typed value
featured command line args parser
TypeScript definitions for node-getopt
Command-line option parser similar to getopt
A Long class for representing a 64-bit two's-complement integer value.
A Long class for representing a 64-bit two's-complement integer value.
Get v8 stack traces as an array of CallSite objects.
A wide-character aware text alignment function for use on the console or with fixed width fonts.
Stringify your JSON at max speed
traditional unix command-line option extractor, with enhancements
featured command line args parser
A full-featured parser for command-line arguments
Long timeout makes it possible to have a timeout or interval that is longer than 24.8 days (2^31-1 milliseconds).
TypeScript definitions for ms
An LRU cache of weak references
React hook for detecting click, tap or point and hold event. Easy to use, highly customizable options, thoroughly tested.
High-priority task queue for Node.js and browsers
High-priority task queue for Node.js and browsers
TypeScript package which smartly trims and strips indentation from multi-line strings
Ruby Standard Library - getopt_long
The getopt library provides two different command line option parsers. They are meant as easier and more convenient replacements for the command line parsers that ship as part of the Ruby standard library. Please see the README for additional comments.
Ruby option parser based on Perl’s Getopt::Long
Yet another command line option parser in Ruby, based on Perl's Getopt::Long module.
You've seen Getopt::Long, OptionParser, Thor? What the world needs now is one more command-line parser. This serves as a backend command line parser that passes the option-parsing portion of it off to OptionParser, Trollop, or any other option-parser that has an adapter[^adapter]. But the parts it *does* do are really exciting: It features arbitrarily deeply nested subcommands, optionally colorized help screens with smart formatting, automatically generated usage syntaxes, manpage generation[^maybe2], lazy-loading of subcommands, and (get this:) you can turn your command line app into a web app. (is processing a form then displaying a record really that different from CLI that does the same?)[^maybe3]
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