Understanding how Console Arguments and Options Are Handled

Symfony Console applications follow the same docopt standard used in most CLI utility tools. This article explains how to handle edge-cases when the commands define options with required values, without values, etc. Read this other article to learn about using arguments and options inside Symfony Console commands.

Have a look at the following command that has three options:

namespace Acme\Console\Command;

use Symfony\Component\Console\Command\Command;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputArgument;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputDefinition;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputOption;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Output\OutputInterface;

class DemoArgsCommand extends Command
{
    protected static $defaultName = 'demo:args';

    protected function configure()
    {
        $this
            ->setDescription('Describe args behaviors')
            ->setDefinition(
                new InputDefinition([
                    new InputOption('foo', 'f'),
                    new InputOption('bar', 'b', InputOption::VALUE_REQUIRED),
                    new InputOption('cat', 'c', InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL),
                ])
            );
    }

    protected function execute(InputInterface $input, OutputInterface $output)
    {
        // ...
    }
}

Since the foo option doesn’t accept a value, it will be either false (when it is not passed to the command) or true (when --foo was passed by the user). The value of the bar option (and its b shortcut respectively) is required. It can be separated from the option name either by spaces or = characters. The cat option (and its c shortcut) behaves similar except that it doesn’t require a value. Have a look at the following table to get an overview of the possible ways to pass options:

Input

foo

bar

cat

--bar=Hello

false

"Hello"

null

--bar Hello

false

"Hello"

null

-b=Hello

false

"=Hello"

null

-b Hello

false

"Hello"

null

-bHello

false

"Hello"

null

-fcWorld -b Hello

true

"Hello"

"World"

-cfWorld -b Hello

false

"Hello"

"fWorld"

-cbWorld

false

null

"bWorld"

Things get a little bit more tricky when the command also accepts an optional argument:

// ...

new InputDefinition([
    // ...
    new InputArgument('arg', InputArgument::OPTIONAL),
]);

You might have to use the special -- separator to separate options from arguments. Have a look at the fifth example in the following table where it is used to tell the command that World is the value for arg and not the value of the optional cat option:

Input

bar

cat

arg

--bar Hello

"Hello"

null

null

--bar Hello World

"Hello"

null

"World"

--bar "Hello World"

"Hello World"

null

null

--bar Hello --cat World

"Hello"

"World"

null

--bar Hello --cat -- World

"Hello"

null

"World"

-b Hello -c World

"Hello"

"World"

null