Enum clap::ErrorKind
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[src]
pub enum ErrorKind {
InvalidValue,
UnknownArgument,
InvalidSubcommand,
UnrecognizedSubcommand,
EmptyValue,
ValueValidation,
TooManyValues,
TooFewValues,
WrongNumberOfValues,
ArgumentConflict,
MissingRequiredArgument,
MissingSubcommand,
MissingArgumentOrSubcommand,
UnexpectedMultipleUsage,
InvalidUtf8,
HelpDisplayed,
VersionDisplayed,
ArgumentNotFound,
Io,
Format,
}Command line argument parser kind of error
Variants
InvalidValueOccurs when an Arg has a set of possible values,
and the user provides a value which isn't in that set.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("speed") .possible_value("fast") .possible_value("slow")) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "other"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::InvalidValue);
UnknownArgumentOccurs when a user provides a flag, option, argument or subcommand which isn't defined.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::from_usage("--flag 'some flag'")) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--other"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::UnknownArgument);
InvalidSubcommandOccurs when the user provides an unrecognized SubCommand which meets the threshold for
being similar enough to an existing subcommand.
If it doesn't meet the threshold, or the 'suggestions' feature is disabled,
the more general UnknownArgument error is returned.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("config") .about("Used for configuration") .arg(Arg::with_name("config_file") .help("The configuration file to use") .index(1))) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "confi"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::InvalidSubcommand);
UnrecognizedSubcommandOccurs when the user provides an unrecognized SubCommand which either
doesn't meet the threshold for being similar enough to an existing subcommand,
or the 'sggestions' feature is disabled.
Otherwise the more detailed InvalidSubcommand error is returned.
This error typically happens when passing additional subcommand names to the help
subcommand. Otherwise, the more general UnknownArgument error is used.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("config") .about("Used for configuration") .arg(Arg::with_name("config_file") .help("The configuration file to use") .index(1))) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "help", "nothing"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::UnrecognizedSubcommand);
EmptyValueOccurs when the user provides an empty value for an option that does not allow empty values.
Examples
let res = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("color") .long("color") .empty_values(false)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--color="]); assert!(res.is_err()); assert_eq!(res.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::EmptyValue);
ValueValidationOccurs when the user provides a value for an argument with a custom validation and the value fails that validation.
Examples
fn is_numeric(val: String) -> Result<(), String> { match val.parse::<i64>() { Ok(..) => Ok(()), Err(..) => Err(String::from("Value wasn't a number!")), } } let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("num") .validator(is_numeric)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "NotANumber"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::ValueValidation);
TooManyValuesOccurs when a user provides more values for an argument than were defined by setting
Arg::max_values.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("arg") .multiple(true) .max_values(2)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "too", "many", "values"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::TooManyValues);
TooFewValuesOccurs when the user provides fewer values for an argument than were defined by setting
Arg::min_values.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("some_opt") .long("opt") .min_values(3)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--opt", "too", "few"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::TooFewValues);
WrongNumberOfValuesOccurs when the user provides a different number of values for an argument than what's
been defined by setting Arg::number_of_values or than was implicitly set by
Arg::value_names.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("some_opt") .long("opt") .takes_value(true) .number_of_values(2)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--opt", "wrong"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::WrongNumberOfValues);
ArgumentConflictOccurs when the user provides two values which conflict with each other and can't be used together.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") .long("debug") .conflicts_with("color")) .arg(Arg::with_name("color") .long("color")) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--debug", "--color"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::ArgumentConflict);
MissingRequiredArgumentOccurs when the user does not provide one or more required arguments.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") .required(true)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::MissingRequiredArgument);
MissingSubcommandOccurs when a subcommand is required (as defined by AppSettings::SubcommandRequired),
but the user does not provide one.
Examples
let err = App::new("prog") .setting(AppSettings::SubcommandRequired) .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("test")) .get_matches_from_safe(vec![ "myprog", ]); assert!(err.is_err()); assert_eq!(err.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::MissingSubcommand);
MissingArgumentOrSubcommandOccurs when either an argument or SubCommand is required, as defined by
AppSettings::ArgRequiredElseHelp, but the user did not provide one.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .setting(AppSettings::ArgRequiredElseHelp) .subcommand(SubCommand::with_name("config") .about("Used for configuration") .arg(Arg::with_name("config_file") .help("The configuration file to use"))) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::MissingArgumentOrSubcommand);
UnexpectedMultipleUsageOccurs when the user provides multiple values to an argument which doesn't allow that.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .arg(Arg::with_name("debug") .long("debug") .multiple(false)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--debug", "--debug"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::UnexpectedMultipleUsage);
InvalidUtf8Occurs when the user provides a value containing invalid UTF-8 for an argument and
AppSettings::StrictUtf8 is set.
Platform Speicific
Non-Windows platforms only (such as Linux, Unix, OSX, etc.)
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .setting(AppSettings::StrictUtf8) .arg(Arg::with_name("utf8") .short("u") .takes_value(true)) .get_matches_from_safe(vec![OsString::from("myprog"), OsString::from("-u"), OsString::from_vec(vec![0xE9])]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::InvalidUtf8);
HelpDisplayedNot a true "error" as it means --help or similar was used.
The help message will be sent to stdout.
Note: If the help is displayed due to an error (such as missing subcommands) it will
be sent to stderr instead of stdout.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--help"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::HelpDisplayed);
VersionDisplayedNot a true "error" as it means --version or similar was used.
The message will be sent to stdout.
Examples
let result = App::new("prog") .get_matches_from_safe(vec!["prog", "--version"]); assert!(result.is_err()); assert_eq!(result.unwrap_err().kind, ErrorKind::VersionDisplayed);
ArgumentNotFoundOccurs when using the value_t! and values_t! macros to convert an argument value
into type T, but the argument you requested wasn't used. I.e. you asked for an argument
with name config to be converted, but config wasn't used by the user.
IoRepresents an I/O error.
Can occur when writing to stderr or stdout or reading a configuration file.
FormatRepresents a Format error.
Typically caused by writing to stderr or stdout.
Trait Implementations
impl Debug for ErrorKind[src]
impl Copy for ErrorKind[src]
impl Clone for ErrorKind[src]
fn clone(&self) -> ErrorKind[src]
Returns a copy of the value. Read more
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)1.0.0[src]
Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more