I am using command line options in my grunt script: http://kurst.co.uk/transfer/Gruntfile.js
However the command grunt --vers:0.0.1
always returns 'undefined' when I try to get the option:
var version = grunt.option('vers') || '';
Can you help me get this working ?
I tried different (CLI) commands:
grunt vers:asd
grunt -vers:asd
grunt vers=asd
as well as using :
grunt.option('-vers');
grunt.option('--vers');
But no luck so far. Hopefully I am missing something simple.
This is my package.js file:
{
"name": "",
"version": "0.1.0",
"description": "Kurst EventDispatcher / Docs Demo ",
"devDependencies": {
"grunt": "~0.4.1",
"grunt-contrib-yuidoc": "*",
"grunt-typescript": "~0.1.3",
"uglify-js": "~2.3.5",
"grunt-lib-contrib": "~0.6.0",
"grunt-contrib-uglify":"*"
}
}
The proper syntax for specifying a command line argument in Grunt is:
grunt --option1=myValue
Then, in the grunt file you can access the value and print it like this:
console.log( grunt.option( "option1" ) );
Also, another reason you are probably having issues with --vers
is because its already a grunt option that returns the version:
★ grunt --vers
grunt-cli v0.1.7
grunt v0.4.1
So it would probably be a good idea to switch to a different option name.
It is worth mentioning that as the amount of command line arguments you want to use grows, you will run into collisions with some arguments that grunt uses internally.
I got around this problem with nopt-grunt
From the Plugin author:
Grunt is awesome. Grunt's support for using additional command line options is not awesome. The current documentation is misleading in that they give examples of using boolean flags and options with values, but they don't tell you that it only works that way with a single option. Try and use more than one option and things fall apart quickly.
It's definitely worth checking out