OK, I have searched and found the following two StackOverflow topics that started me in the right direction:
Argument-parsing helpers for C/UNIX
Pass arguments into C program from command line
NOTE: ALL CODE IS PSEUDO-CODE. WILL POST COMPILABLE CODE WHEN IT WORKS.
However, I'm still completely confused on how to use getopt_long() in C. The program I'm writing is defined as having the following possible tags (but can include as many as you absolutely need, filling the rest in with empty values):
id3tagEd filename -title "title" -artist "artist" -year 1991 -comment "comment" -album "album" -track 1
Now, from what I read, I need to utilize a struct for the long options, correct? If so, I wrote something along the lines of this:
struct fields field =
{
char *[] title;
char *[] artist;
char *[] album;
int year;
char *[] comment;
int track;
}
static struct options long_options[] =
{
{"title", 0, &field.title, 't'},
{"artist", 0, &field.artist, 'a'},
{"album", 0, &field.album, 'b'},
{"year", 0, &field.year, 'y'},
{"comment", 0, &field.comment, 'c'},
{"track", 0, &field.track, 'u'},
{0, 0, 0, 0}
}
Now, from what I gathered, I would be calling it via this:
int option_index = 0;
int values = getopt_long(argc, argv, "tabycu", long_options, &option_index);
From here, could I strictly use the field struct and do what I need to within my program? However, if this is the case, can someone explain the whole long_options struct? I read the man pages and such, and I'm just utterly confused. By rereading the man pages, I can see I can set variables to null, and should be setting all my option requirements to "required_argument"? And then setting the structs via a while() loop? However, I see optarg being used. Is this set by getopt_long()? Or is it missing from the example?
And one last issue, I will always have an unnamed required option: filename, would I just use argv[0] to gain access to that? (Since I can assume it'll be first).
On a side note, this is related to a homework problem, but it has nothing to do with fixing it, its more of a fundamental, have to understand argument passing and parsing in C via command line first.
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