Thanks, but the problem seems to be the opposite one.... ocamlp3l also uses Args, and once I tell it to parse the command-line options, the options such as -rootp3l do not seem to work any more.  The problem is not that I need to avoid -rootp3l; the problem seems to be that the ocamlp3l runtime doesn't see its own options any more...

Luca


On 8/21/07, Till Varoquaux < till.varoquaux@gmail.com> wrote:
The Arg module use a cursor to know which argument it is is currently
parsing. You can therefor ignore the first argument like this:

incr Arg.current

before calling Arg.parse

Cheers,
Till

On 8/21/07, Luca de Alfaro <luca@dealfaro.org > wrote:
> I am trying to use ocamlp3l to parallelize some code.  Using the skeleton
> paradigm was a lot of fun and quite easy, but I am stumbling on the easiest
> of issues...
>
> My code needs some command-line options, and I am processing them with the
> Arg package.  The ocamlp3l manual does not anything about what to do for
> command-line options.
>
> I cannot simly run:
>
> ./foo -p3lroot -i blah -o boink
>
> because Arg tells me that it doesn't know what to do with -p3lroot.
> Fine, but, then how do I do?  It's not really feasible for me to do without
> command-line options...
>
> Many thanks in advance,
>
> Luca
>
> _______________________________________________
> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management:
> http://yquem.inria.fr/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/caml-list
> Archives: http://caml.inria.fr
> Beginner's list:
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners
> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs
>
>


--
http://till-varoquaux.blogspot.com/