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AutoOpts provides automated support for five options. help
and
more-help
are always provided. version
is provided if
version
is defined in the option definitions See section Program Description Attributes.
save-opts
and load-opts
are provided if at least
one homerc
is defined See section Program Description Attributes.
Below are the option names and flag values. The flags are activated if and
only if at least one user-defined option also uses a flag value. These
flags may be deleted or changed to characters of your choosing by specifying
xxx-value = "y";
, where xxx
is one of the five names below and
y
is either empty or the character of your choice. For example, to
change the help flag from ?
to h
, specify help-value = "h";
;
and to require that save-opts
be specified only with its long
option name, specify save-opts-value = "";
.
This option will immediately invoke the USAGE()
procedure
and display the usage line, a description of each option with
its description and option usage information. This is followed
by the contents of the definition of the detail
text macro.
This option is identical to the help
option, except that the
output is passed through a pager program. (more
by default, or
the program identified by the PAGER
environment variable.)
This will print the program name, title and version. If it is followed by
the letter c
and a value for copyright
and owner
have
been provided, then the copyright will be printed, too. If it is followed
by the letter n
, then the full copyright notice (if available) will
be printed.
This option will cause the option state to be printed in the configuration file format when option processing is done but not yet verified for consistency. The program will terminate successfully without running when this has completed. Note that for most shells you will have to quote or escape the flag character to restrict special meanings to the shell.
The output file will be the configuration file name (default or provided by
rcfile
) in the last directory named in a homerc
definition.
This option may be set from within your program by invoking the
"SET_OPT_SAVE_OPTS(filename)
" macro (see section SET_OPT_name - Force an option to be set).
Invoking this macro will set the file name for saving the option processing
state, but the state will not actually be saved. You must call
optionSaveFile
to do that (see section optionSaveFile).
CAVEAT: if, after invoking this macro, you call
optionProcess
, the option processing state will be saved to this file
and optionProcess
will not return. You may wish to invoke
CLEAR_OPT( SAVE_OPTS )
(see section CLEAR_OPT( <NAME> ) - Clear Option Markings) beforehand.
This option will load options from the named file. They will be treated exactly as if they were loaded from the normally found configuration files, but will not be loaded until the option is actually processed. This can also be used within another configuration file, causing them to nest.
It is ultimately intended that specifying the option,
no-load-opts
will suppress the processing of configuration files and
environment variables. To do this, AutoOpts must first implement
pre-scanning of the options, environment and config files.
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This document was generated by Bruce Korb on September, 30 2006 using texi2html 1.76.