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Argument Syntax – WP-CLI – WordPress.org

Argument Syntax

WP-CLIWP-CLI WP-CLI is the Command Line Interface for WordPress, used to do administrative and development tasks in a programmatic way. The project page is http://wp-cli.org/ https://make.wordpress.org/cli/ commands use a standardized syntax to describe their arguments and options. Understanding this syntax will help you use commands correctly and avoid confusion.

Syntax Conventions

The command synopsis uses specific formatting to indicate whether arguments are required or optional, and what type of values they accept.

Required Arguments

Arguments without square brackets are required and must be provided:

  • <argument> – A required positional argument that needs a value.
    • Example: <hook> means you must provide a hook name
    • Usage: wp cron event schedule my_hook
  • --option=<value> – A required option that needs a value.
    • Example: --dbname=<dbname> means you must provide the database name
    • Usage: wp config create --dbname=mydatabase --dbuser=root

Optional Arguments

Arguments enclosed in square brackets [ ] are optional:

  • [<argument>] – An optional positional argument.
    • Example: [<next-run>] means this argument can be omitted
    • If omitted, a default value may be used
  • [--option=<value>] – An optional option that accepts a value.
    • Example: [--dbhost=<dbhost>] means this option can be omitted
    • Often has a default value (e.g., localhost for --dbhost)
    • Usage: wp config create --dbname=mydb --dbuser=root --dbhost=127.0.0.1
  • [--flag] – An optional boolean flag.
    • Example: [--force] means this flag can be included or omitted
    • When present, the flag is true; when absent, it’s false
    • Usage: wp config create --dbname=mydb --dbuser=root --force

Boolean Flags

Boolean flags are switches that enable or disable a feature:

  • Enabling: Include the flag to set it to true
    • Example: --force enables force mode
  • Disabling: Most flags can be “reversed” with a --no- prefix
    • Example: --no-force explicitly disables force mode
    • Example: --no-color disables color output

Associative Arguments

Some commands accept arbitrary key-value pairs:

  • [--<field>=<value>] – Accepts any field name with a value.
    • Example: --foo=bar --baz=qux
    • Useful for passing custom data or configuration

Repeatable Arguments

Arguments that can be provided multiple times:

  • [--<field>=<value>] – When documented as repeatable, you can provide the option multiple times.
    • Example: --require=<path> can be used as --require=/path/one.php --require=/path/two.php

Variadic Arguments

Arguments that accept multiple values:

  • <argument>... – The ellipsis (...) indicates the argument accepts one or more values.
    • Example: <file>... means you can provide multiple files
    • Usage: wp plugin install plugin1 plugin2 plugin3

Value Placeholders

The text inside angle brackets describes what kind of value is expected:

  • <id> – Expects a numeric identifier
  • <file> – Expects a file path
  • <url> – Expects a URLURL A specific web address of a website or web page on the Internet, such as a website’s URL www.wordpress.org
  • <name> – Expects a name or label
  • <format> – Expects a format type (often with available options listed)

Common Patterns

Required Database Connection

Many commands require database connection details:

--dbname=<dbname> --dbuser=<dbuser> [--dbpass=<dbpass>] [--dbhost=<dbhost>]
  • --dbname and --dbuser are required
  • --dbpass and --dbhost are optional

Format Options

Commands that output data often accept a format option:

[--format=<format>]

Common formats include: table, csv, json, yaml, count

Fields and Filtering

Commands that work with multiple fields:

[--fields=<fields>] [--field=<field>]
  • --fields typically accepts a comma-separated list
  • --field typically returns a single field value

Examples

Here are practical examples showing different syntax types:

# Required arguments (no brackets)
wp config create --dbname=mydb --dbuser=root

# Optional arguments with defaults
wp config create --dbname=mydb --dbuser=root --dbhost=localhost

# Boolean flags
wp plugin install hello-dolly --activate --force

# Negated boolean flags
wp plugin list --no-color

# Associative arguments
wp cron event schedule my_hook --foo=bar --baz=qux

# Multiple values
wp plugin install plugin1 plugin2 plugin3

# Optional fields with specific format options
wp post list --format=json --fields=ID,post_title,post_date

Tips

  • Always check the command’s OPTIONS section to see which arguments are required
  • Use wp help <command> to see the complete synopsis and documentation
  • When in doubt about a flag, try the --help option: wp <command> --help
  • Default values for optional arguments are typically listed in the OPTIONS section
  • Quote values that contain spaces or special characters: --title="My Post Title"
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