Enum docopt::Error
[−]
[src]
pub enum Error { Usage(String), Argv(String), NoMatch, Decode(String), WithProgramUsage(Box<Error>, String), Help, Version(String), }
Represents the different types of Docopt errors.
This error type has a lot of variants. In the common case, you probably
don't care why Docopt has failed, and would rather just quit the program
and show an error message instead. The exit
method defined on the Error
type will do just that. It will also set the exit code appropriately
(no error for --help
or --version
, but an error code for bad usage,
bad argv, no match or bad decode).
Example
Generally, you want to parse the usage string, try to match the argv and then quit the program if there was an error reported at any point in that process. This can be achieved like so:
use docopt::Docopt; const USAGE: &'static str = " Usage: ... "; let args = Docopt::new(USAGE) .and_then(|d| d.parse()) .unwrap_or_else(|e| e.exit());
Variants
Usage | Parsing the usage string failed. This error can only be triggered by the programmer, i.e., the writer of the Docopt usage string. This error is usually indicative of a bug in your program. |
Argv | Parsing the argv specified failed. The payload is a string describing why the arguments provided could not be parsed. This is distinct from |
NoMatch | The given argv parsed successfully, but it did not match any example usage of the program. Regrettably, there is no descriptive message describing why the given argv didn't match any of the usage strings. |
Decode | This indicates a problem decoding a successful argv match into a decodable value. |
WithProgramUsage | Parsing failed, and the program usage should be printed next to the
failure message. Typically this wraps |
Help | Decoding or parsing failed because the command line specified that the help message should be printed. |
Version | Decoding or parsing failed because the command line specified that the version should be printed The version is included as a payload to this variant. |
Methods
impl Error
fn fatal(&self) -> bool
Return whether this was a fatal error or not.
Non-fatal errors include requests to print the help or version information of a program, while fatal errors include those such as failing to decode or parse.
fn exit(&self) -> !
Print this error and immediately exit the program.
If the error is non-fatal (e.g., Help
or Version
), then the
error is printed to stdout and the exit status will be 0
. Otherwise,
when the error is fatal, the error is printed to stderr and the
exit status will be 1
.