It is possible to bind arguments to a variable storing their value, as an
alternative to explicitly calling ``program.get<T>(arg_name)`` or ``program[arg_name]``
This is currently implementeted for variables of type ``bool`` (this also
implicitly calls ``flag()``), ``int``, ``double``, ``std::string`` and
``std::vector<std::string>``. If the argument is not specified in the command
line, the default value (if set) is set into the variable.
```cpp
bool flagvar = false;
program.add_argument("--flagvar").store_into(flagvar);
int intvar = 0;
program.add_argument("--intvar").store_into(intvar);
double doublevar = 0;
program.add_argument("--doublevar").store_into(doublevar);
std::string strvar;
program.add_argument("--strvar").store_into(strvar);
std::vector<std::string> strvar_repeated;
program.add_argument("--strvar-repeated").append().store_into(strvar_repeated);
std::vector<std::string> strvar_multi_valued;
program.add_argument("--strvar-multi-valued").nargs(2).store_into(strvar_multi_valued);
```
It is sometimes desirable to offer an alias for an argument, but without it
appearing it in the usage. For example, to phase out a deprecated wording of
an argument while not breaking backwards compatible. This can be done with
the ``ArgumentParser::add_hidden_alias_for()` method.
```cpp
argparse::ArgumentParser program("test");
auto &arg = program.add_argument("--suppress").flag();
program.add_hidden_alias_for(arg, "--supress"); // old misspelled alias
```
Allows users to opt-out of std::exit call in default arguments without
needing to replace with new --help and --version arguments.
Signed-off-by: Sean Robinson <sean.robinson@scottsdalecc.edu>
This allows updating attached object properties without holding external
references to the various Argument and ArgumentParser objects.
Closes#227
Signed-off-by: Sean Robinson <sean.robinson@scottsdalecc.edu>
This allows checking whether user input was processed into the parser
or any attached subparsers.
Closes#212
Signed-off-by: Sean Robinson <sean.robinson@scottsdalecc.edu>