= Cobra CommandLine Options = {{{ cobra -h }}} or {{{ cobra -help }}} will dump a page detailing all the command line options supported. The compiler runs for each invocation in a particular mode of operation. These correspond to the 'commands on paths' * -compile ''or'' -c - compile the provided files and bind into an executable * -run-exe ''or'' -r - as for -compile but run the executable after successful compilation. This is the default mode if none other is given * -test - as for -compile but run the executables test cases after successful execution * -document - parse the provided files and generate documentation from the parse tree In addition there are three standalone commands * -help ''or'' -h - display the cobra commandline options and descriptions * -about - display info about cobra * -version - display the cobra executables version information Commandline items that are not options ( begin with '-') are taken to be filenames. Cobra can take one or a list of commandline given files to compile and the files can be cobra code ( filename ends in '.cobra') or C# code ( filename ends in '.cs'. Filenames without any extension are assumed to be a cobra code file of the same name with a '.cobra' extension i.e {{{ cobra myProg.cobra cobra myProg }}} both do the same thing - compile a cobra code file myProg.cobra to an executable and run it (if compilation succeeds) == Options == options form : -option:value, synonyms TODO Sections * Files:file * Controlling type of executable built -target/-t * Providing references and library search path -reference/-ref -library-directory/-lib -embed-run-time/-ert * Controlling compilation -include-{asserts, nil-checks, tests} * -optimize/-o -debug/-d -turbo/-t * -keep-intermediate-files/-kif * -contracts -verbosity/-v * Specifying executable and args for it -run-args/-- and -run * Error handling -detailed-stack-trace/dst -debugging-tips -exception-report -reveal-internal-exceptions * Development cycle - colorize -editor * Back end -sharp-compiler -sharp-args == Examples ==