=head1 NAME Getopt::Long, GetOptions - extended getopt processing =head1 SYNOPSIS use Getopt::Long; $result = GetOptions (...option-descriptions...); =head1 DESCRIPTION This package implements an extended getopt function. This function adheres to the new syntax (long option names, no bundling). It tries to implement the better functionality of traditional, GNU and POSIX getopt() functions. Each description should designate a valid Perl identifier, optionally followed by an argument specifier. Values for argument specifiers are: option does not take an argument ! option does not take an argument and may be negated =s :s option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) string argument =i :i option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) integer argument =f :f option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) real number argument If option "name" is set, it will cause the Perl variable $opt_name to be set to the specified value. The calling program can use this variable to detect whether the option has been set. Options that do not take an argument will be set to 1 (one). Options that take an optional argument will be defined, but set to '' if no actual argument has been supplied. If an "@" sign is appended to the argument specifier, the option is treated as an array. Value(s) are not set, but pushed into array @opt_name. Options that do not take a value may have an "!" argument spacifier to indicate that they may be negated. E.g. "foo!" will allow B<-foo> (which sets $opt_foo to 1) and B<-nofoo> (which will set $opt_foo to 0). The option name may actually be a list of option names, separated by '|'s, e.g. B<"foo|bar|blech=s". In this example, options 'bar' and 'blech' will set $opt_foo instead. Option names may be abbreviated to uniqueness, depending on configuration variable $autoabbrev. Dashes in option names are allowed (e.g. pcc-struct-return) and will be translated to underscores in the corresponding Perl variable (e.g. $opt_pcc_struct_return). Note that a lone dash "-" is considered an option, corresponding Perl identifier is $opt_ . A double dash "--" signals end of the options list. If the first option of the list consists of non-alphanumeric characters only, it is interpreted as a generic option starter. Everything starting with one of the characters from the starter will be considered an option. The default values for the option starters are "-" (traditional), "--" (POSIX) and "+" (GNU, being phased out). Options that start with "--" may have an argument appended, separated with an "=", e.g. "--foo=bar". If configuration varaible $getopt_compat is set to a non-zero value, options that start with "+" may also include their arguments, e.g. "+foo=bar". A return status of 0 (false) indicates that the function detected one or more errors. =head1 EXAMPLES If option "one:i" (i.e. takes an optional integer argument), then the following situations are handled: -one -two -> $opt_one = '', -two is next option -one -2 -> $opt_one = -2 Also, assume "foo=s" and "bar:s" : -bar -xxx -> $opt_bar = '', '-xxx' is next option -foo -bar -> $opt_foo = '-bar' -foo -- -> $opt_foo = '--' In GNU or POSIX format, option names and values can be combined: +foo=blech -> $opt_foo = 'blech' --bar= -> $opt_bar = '' --bar=-- -> $opt_bar = '--' =over 12 =item $autoabbrev Allow option names to be abbreviated to uniqueness. Default is 1 unless environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set. =item $getopt_compat Allow '+' to start options. Default is 1 unless environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set. =item $option_start Regexp with option starters. Default is (--|-) if environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, (--|-|\+) otherwise. =item $order Whether non-options are allowed to be mixed with options. Default is $REQUIRE_ORDER if environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, $PERMUTE otherwise. =item $ignorecase Ignore case when matching options. Default is 1. =item $debug Enable debugging output. Default is 0. =back =head1 NOTE Does not yet use the Exporter--or even packages!! Thus, it's not a real module.