NAME
Docopt - Command-line interface description language
SYNOPSIS
use Docopt;
my $opts = docopt();
...
__END__
=head1 SYNOPSIS
    log-aggregate [--date=<ymd>]
DESCRIPTION
Docopt.pm is still under development. I may change interface without notice.
Docopt is command-line interface description language.
docopt helps you:
docopt is based on conventions that are used for decades in help messages and man pages for program interface description. Interface description in docopt is such a help message, but formalized. Here is an example:
Naval Fate.
Usage:
    naval_fate ship new <name>...
    naval_fate ship <name> move <x> <y> [--speed=<kn>]
    naval_fate ship shoot <x> <y>
    naval_fate mine (set|remove) <x> <y> [--moored|--drifting]
    naval_fate -h | --help
    naval_fate --version
Options:
    -h --help     Show this screen.
    --version     Show version.
    --speed=<kn>  Speed in knots [default: 10].
    --moored      Moored (anchored) mine.
    --drifting    Drifting mine.
The example describes interface of executable naval_fate, which can be invoked with different combinations of commands (ship, new, move, etc.), options (-h, --help, --speed=<kn>, etc.) and positional arguments (<name>, <x>, <y>).
Example uses brackets "[ ]", parens "( )", pipes "|" and ellipsis "..." to describe optional, required, mutually exclusive, and repeating elements. Together, these elements form valid usage patterns, each starting with program's name naval_fate.
Below the usage patterns, there is a list of options with descriptions. They describe whether an option has short/long forms (-h, --help), whether an option has an argument (--speed=<kn>), and whether that argument has a default value ([default: 10]).
docopt implementation will extract all that information and generate a command-line arguments parser, with text of the example above being the help message, which is shown to a user when the program is invoked with -h or --help options.
Usage patterns
You can read official document: http://docopt.org/
FUNCTIONS
my $opts = docopt(%args)- 
Analyze argv by Docopt!
Return value is HashRef.
You can pass following options in
%args:- doc
 - 
It's Docopt documentation.
If you don't provide this argument, Docopt.pm uses pod SYNOPSIS section in $0.
 - argv
 - 
Argument in arrayref.
Default:
\@ARGV - help
 - 
If it's true value, Docopt.pm enables
--helpoption automatically.Default: true.
 - version
 - 
Version number of the script. If it's not undef, Docopt.pm enables
--versionoption.Default: undef
 - option_first
 - 
if (options_first) { argv ::= [ long | shorts ]* [ argument ]* [ '--' [ argument ]* ] ; } else { argv ::= [ long | shorts | argument ]* [ '--' [ argument ]* ] ; }Default: undef
 
 
BASED ON
This version is based on docopt-py e495aaaf0b9dcea6bc8bc97d9143a0d7a649fa06.
LICENSE
Copyright (C) tokuhirom.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
tokuhirom <tokuhirom@gmail.com>