package ppx_deriving_argparse

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Very simple ppx deriver of command line parser for Ocaml >=4.02

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

0.0.5.tar.gz
sha256=8428af118559eef9185ea878135dcef8063076de7f3718a1e07676bf22ba6122
md5=9ebedc11b6e540f8931d636fe36405b0

README.md.html

[@@deriving argparse]

Install

Available from opam:

➜  opam install ppx_deriving_argparse

Usage

(* Simple neural network example *)

type activation = Relu | Sigmoid | Tanh | Silu | Softmax [@@deriving show]

let parse_activation = function 
    "relu" -> Relu | "sigmoid" -> Sigmoid | "tanh" -> Tanh | "silu" -> Silu | "softmax" -> Softmax
    | s -> raise (Invalid_argument s)

let show_activation = function
    | Relu -> "relu" | Sigmoid -> "sigmoid" | Tanh -> "tanh" | Silu -> "silu" | Softmax -> "softmax"


type t = {
    (* [@short] for short form of the argument *)
    nlayers        : int   [@short "-l"]
        (** the number of layers *);

    (* with [@set_false], "-use-dropout" flag turns the value false. *)
    use_dropout    : bool  [@set_false]
        (** true if use dropout *);

    dropout_rate   : float option
        (** dropout rate *);

    test : int list option
        (** this is an test argument *);

    test2 : int option list;

    (* arguments with custom type *)
    activation : activation [@print show_activation] [@parse parse_activation];
        (** activation function in feed forward layers *)

    activation2 : activation [@parse parse_activation];
        (** activation function in feed forward layers *)
} [@@deriving show, argparse {
    (* You can pass positional argument, which is (string * string) list.  *)
    positional = 
        ["train", "train file";
        "eval", "some file"];

    (* also some description. *)
    description = "some neural networks";
}]

(*
   You can omit either of positional and description 
   as in [@@deriving argparse { description = "some ..." }]
   or entirely: [@@deriving argparse].
*)


(* default arguments *)
let default = {
    nlayers = 2;
    use_dropout = true;
    dropout_rate = Some 0.1;
    test = Some [1;2;3];
    test2 = [Some 1;Some 2;Some 3; None];
    activation = Relu;
    activation2 = Sigmoid;
}

(*
   [@@argparse] generates the following functions:
   val argparse : t -> string -> string array -> t * string array
   val prerr_argparse : string -> t -> unit

   while for types whose name is different from t (say config):
   val argparse_config : config -> string -> string array -> config * string array
   val prerr_config_argparse : string -> config -> unit
*)

let () =
    let cfg, rest = argparse default "example" Sys.argv in
    prerr_argparse "example" cfg;
    print_endline (show cfg);
    Array.iter print_endline rest

derives a command line parser with an error message function:

➜ ./example.exe -h
Usage: example [-help] [-nlayers NLAYERS]  [-use-dropout]
                [-dropout-rate DROPOUT_RATE]  [-test TEST]  [-test2 TEST2]
                [-activation ACTIVATION]  [-activation2 ACTIVATION2]
                TRAIN EVAL

some neural networks

Arguments:
  TRAIN                      : train file
  EVAL                       : some file

Options:
  -l, -nlayers NLAYERS       :  the number of layers  {2}
  -use-dropout               :  true if use dropout  {true}
  -dropout-rate DROPOUT_RATE :  dropout rate  {0.1}
  -test TEST                 :  this is an test argument  {[1, 2, 3]}
  -test2 TEST2               :  {[1, 2, 3, none]}
  -activation ACTIVATION     :  activation function in feed forward layers  {relu}
  -activation2 ACTIVATION2   :  activation function in feed forward layers  {<unknown>}
  -h, -help                  :  show this help message and exit

On parse error:

➜  ./example.exe -l a
PARSE ERROR: Invalid argument for keyword option "-l": "a"
Usage: example [-help] [-nlayers NLAYERS]  [-use-dropout]
                [-dropout-rate DROPOUT_RATE]  [-test TEST]  [-test2 TEST2]
                [-activation ACTIVATION]  [-activation2 ACTIVATION2]
                TRAIN EVAL

The parsing results are in type t for optional arguments and in string array for positional ones.

(* print_endline (show cfg) *)
{ Example.src_vocab_size = 3; tgt_vocab_size = 100; num_units = 512;
  nheads = 8; nlayers = 6; use_dropout = false; dropout_rate = (Some 0.1);
  test = (Some [1; 1; 1]); test2 = [(Some 1); (Some 2); (Some 3); None];
  activation = Example.Relu; activation2 = Example.Sigmoid } 
  
(* Array.iter print_endline rest *)
train.txt
test.txt

For simplicity, [@@argparse] does not take care of the structure of positional arguments except that the resulting array's length is assured to be more than or equal to that of positional list. This can be exploited to do:

[@@argparse { positional = ["files ...", "a list of files to process"] }]

for arguments of variable length.

Contact

Reporting issues, comments, or any suggestions (especially on the interface) are welcome: yoshikawa.masashi.yh8@is.naist.jp

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