// [_Command-line flags_](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Command-line_interface#Command-line_option)
// are a common way to specify options for command-line
// programs. For example, in `wc -l` the `-l` is a
// command-line flag.

package main

// Go provides a `flag` package supporting basic
// command-line flag parsing. We'll use this package to
// implement our example command-line program.
import (
	"flag"
	"fmt"
)

func main() {

	// Basic flag declarations are available for string,
	// integer, and boolean options. Here we declare a
	// string flag `word` with a default value `"foo"`
	// and a short description. This `flag.String` function
	// returns a string pointer (not a string value);
	// we'll see how to use this pointer below.
	wordPtr := flag.String("word", "foo", "a string")

	// This declares `numb` and `fork` flags, using a
	// similar approach to the `word` flag.
	numbPtr := flag.Int("numb", 42, "an int")
	boolPtr := flag.Bool("fork", false, "a bool")

	// It's also possible to declare an option that uses an
	// existing var declared elsewhere in the program.
	// Note that we need to pass in a pointer to the flag
	// declaration function.
	var svar string
	flag.StringVar(&svar, "svar", "bar", "a string var")

	// Once all flags are declared, call `flag.Parse()`
	// to execute the command-line parsing.
	flag.Parse()

	// Here we'll just dump out the parsed options and
	// any trailing positional arguments. Note that we
	// need to dereference the pointers with e.g. `*wordPtr`
	// to get the actual option values.
	fmt.Println("word:", *wordPtr)
	fmt.Println("numb:", *numbPtr)
	fmt.Println("fork:", *boolPtr)
	fmt.Println("svar:", svar)
	fmt.Println("tail:", flag.Args())
}