Files
n8n_Demo/web_frontend/food-order-demo/node_modules/arg
Yep_Q c3eb7125cc feat: 创建食品订单班演示系统基础框架
详细说明:
- 基于文旅订单班框架复制创建food-order-demo项目
- 修改端口配置为4174避免冲突
- 更新LandingPage为青莳轻食主题(绿色健康风格)
- 重新定义7个食品行业专业Agent:
  * 市场研究专家:轻食市场分析、客群画像
  * 营养配方师:营养成分配比、低卡高蛋白设计
  * 供应链管理专家:有机食材供应、溯源体系
  * 品牌策划师:品牌定位、店铺空间布局
  * 财务分析师:投资预算、ROI分析
  * 运营管理专家:运营流程、品控标准
  * 食品创业导师:中央协调、方案整合
- 创建专用启动脚本start.sh
- 验证系统可正常运行在端口4174
- 实现代码复用率90%,符合预期目标

影响文件: web_frontend/food-order-demo/
技术栈: React 18 + TypeScript + Tailwind CSS + Zustand
2025-09-28 10:32:44 +08:00
..

Arg

arg is an unopinionated, no-frills CLI argument parser.

Installation

npm install arg

Usage

arg() takes either 1 or 2 arguments:

  1. Command line specification object (see below)
  2. Parse options (Optional, defaults to {permissive: false, argv: process.argv.slice(2), stopAtPositional: false})

It returns an object with any values present on the command-line (missing options are thus missing from the resulting object). Arg performs no validation/requirement checking - we leave that up to the application.

All parameters that aren't consumed by options (commonly referred to as "extra" parameters) are added to result._, which is always an array (even if no extra parameters are passed, in which case an empty array is returned).

const arg = require('arg');

// `options` is an optional parameter
const args = arg(
	spec,
	(options = { permissive: false, argv: process.argv.slice(2) })
);

For example:

$ node ./hello.js --verbose -vvv --port=1234 -n 'My name' foo bar --tag qux --tag=qix -- --foobar
// hello.js
const arg = require('arg');

const args = arg({
	// Types
	'--help': Boolean,
	'--version': Boolean,
	'--verbose': arg.COUNT, // Counts the number of times --verbose is passed
	'--port': Number, // --port <number> or --port=<number>
	'--name': String, // --name <string> or --name=<string>
	'--tag': [String], // --tag <string> or --tag=<string>

	// Aliases
	'-v': '--verbose',
	'-n': '--name', // -n <string>; result is stored in --name
	'--label': '--name' // --label <string> or --label=<string>;
	//     result is stored in --name
});

console.log(args);
/*
{
	_: ["foo", "bar", "--foobar"],
	'--port': 1234,
	'--verbose': 4,
	'--name': "My name",
	'--tag': ["qux", "qix"]
}
*/

The values for each key=>value pair is either a type (function or [function]) or a string (indicating an alias).

  • In the case of a function, the string value of the argument's value is passed to it, and the return value is used as the ultimate value.

  • In the case of an array, the only element must be a type function. Array types indicate that the argument may be passed multiple times, and as such the resulting value in the returned object is an array with all of the values that were passed using the specified flag.

  • In the case of a string, an alias is established. If a flag is passed that matches the key, then the value is substituted in its place.

Type functions are passed three arguments:

  1. The parameter value (always a string)
  2. The parameter name (e.g. --label)
  3. The previous value for the destination (useful for reduce-like operations or for supporting -v multiple times, etc.)

This means the built-in String, Number, and Boolean type constructors "just work" as type functions.

Note that Boolean and [Boolean] have special treatment - an option argument is not consumed or passed, but instead true is returned. These options are called "flags".

For custom handlers that wish to behave as flags, you may pass the function through arg.flag():

const arg = require('arg');

const argv = [
	'--foo',
	'bar',
	'-ff',
	'baz',
	'--foo',
	'--foo',
	'qux',
	'-fff',
	'qix'
];

function myHandler(value, argName, previousValue) {
	/* `value` is always `true` */
	return 'na ' + (previousValue || 'batman!');
}

const args = arg(
	{
		'--foo': arg.flag(myHandler),
		'-f': '--foo'
	},
	{
		argv
	}
);

console.log(args);
/*
{
	_: ['bar', 'baz', 'qux', 'qix'],
	'--foo': 'na na na na na na na na batman!'
}
*/

As well, arg supplies a helper argument handler called arg.COUNT, which equivalent to a [Boolean] argument's .length property - effectively counting the number of times the boolean flag, denoted by the key, is passed on the command line.. For example, this is how you could implement ssh's multiple levels of verbosity (-vvvv being the most verbose).

const arg = require('arg');

const argv = ['-AAAA', '-BBBB'];

const args = arg(
	{
		'-A': arg.COUNT,
		'-B': [Boolean]
	},
	{
		argv
	}
);

console.log(args);
/*
{
	_: [],
	'-A': 4,
	'-B': [true, true, true, true]
}
*/

Options

If a second parameter is specified and is an object, it specifies parsing options to modify the behavior of arg().

argv

If you have already sliced or generated a number of raw arguments to be parsed (as opposed to letting arg slice them from process.argv) you may specify them in the argv option.

For example:

const args = arg(
	{
		'--foo': String
	},
	{
		argv: ['hello', '--foo', 'world']
	}
);

results in:

const args = {
	_: ['hello'],
	'--foo': 'world'
};

permissive

When permissive set to true, arg will push any unknown arguments onto the "extra" argument array (result._) instead of throwing an error about an unknown flag.

For example:

const arg = require('arg');

const argv = [
	'--foo',
	'hello',
	'--qux',
	'qix',
	'--bar',
	'12345',
	'hello again'
];

const args = arg(
	{
		'--foo': String,
		'--bar': Number
	},
	{
		argv,
		permissive: true
	}
);

results in:

const args = {
	_: ['--qux', 'qix', 'hello again'],
	'--foo': 'hello',
	'--bar': 12345
};

stopAtPositional

When stopAtPositional is set to true, arg will halt parsing at the first positional argument.

For example:

const arg = require('arg');

const argv = ['--foo', 'hello', '--bar'];

const args = arg(
	{
		'--foo': Boolean,
		'--bar': Boolean
	},
	{
		argv,
		stopAtPositional: true
	}
);

results in:

const args = {
	_: ['hello', '--bar'],
	'--foo': true
};

Errors

Some errors that arg throws provide a .code property in order to aid in recovering from user error, or to differentiate between user error and developer error (bug).

ARG_UNKNOWN_OPTION

If an unknown option (not defined in the spec object) is passed, an error with code ARG_UNKNOWN_OPTION will be thrown:

// cli.js
try {
	require('arg')({ '--hi': String });
} catch (err) {
	if (err.code === 'ARG_UNKNOWN_OPTION') {
		console.log(err.message);
	} else {
		throw err;
	}
}
node cli.js --extraneous true
Unknown or unexpected option: --extraneous

FAQ

A few questions and answers that have been asked before:

How do I require an argument with arg?

Do the assertion yourself, such as:

const args = arg({ '--name': String });

if (!args['--name']) throw new Error('missing required argument: --name');

License

Released under the MIT License.