On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:39:58 UTC, mw wrote:
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line
options. Is the following, adapted from the first example in
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 09:48:26 UTC, MoonlightSentinel
wrote:
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line options.
Try passing config.passThrough, it sh
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 17:04:17 UTC, Jon Degenhardt wrote:
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line
options. Is the following, adapted from the first
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line options.
Is the following, adapted from the first example in the getopt
documentation, a reasonable approach?
I use
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line options.
Try passing config.passThrough, it should disable the exception
for unknown arguments.
On Saturday, 15 August 2020 at 04:09:19 UTC, James Gray wrote:
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to
throw an unhandled exception when parsing command line options.
Is the following, adapted from the first example in the getopt
documentation, a reasonable approach?
life
I am trying to use getopt and would not like the program to throw
an unhandled exception when parsing command line options. Is the
following, adapted from the first example in the getopt
documentation, a reasonable approach?
import std.getopt;
string data = "file.dat";
int length = 24;
bool