The HFlags library supports easy definition of command line flags,
reimplementing the ideas from Google's gflags
(http://code.google.com/p/gflags).
Command line flags can be declared in any file at the toplevel,
using defineFlag. At runtime, the actual values are assigned to
the toplevel flags_name constants. Those can be used purely
throughout the program.
At the beginning of the main function, $initHFlags "program
description" has to be called to initialize the flags. All flags
will be initialized that are transitively reachable via imports from
main. This means, that any Haskell package can easily define
command line flags with HFlags. This feature is demonstrated by
http://github.com/errge/hflags/blob/master/examples/ImportExample.hs
and http://github.com/errge/hflags/tree/master/examples/package.
A simple example (more in the
http://github.com/errge/hflags/tree/master/examples directory):
At initHFlags time, the library also tries to gather flags out of
environment variables. HFLAGS_verbose=True is equivalent to
specify --verbose=True. This environment feature only works with
long options and the user has to specify a value even for Bools.
Since version 0.2, you mustn't put the initHFlags in a parentheses with the program description. Just $initHFlags, it's cleaner.
See http://github.com/errge/hflags/tree/master/changelog for recent changes.