In computer programming, a usage message or help message is a brief message displayed by a program that utilizes a command-line interface for execution. This message usually consists of the correct command line usage for the program and includes a list of the correct command-line arguments or options acceptable to said program.
Usage messages are utilized as a quick way for a program to inform the user of proper command syntax, and should not be substituted for proper error messages or for detailed documentation such as a man page.
Pattern
On Unix-like platforms, usage messages usually follow the same common pattern:
They often begin with "Usage:" , the command, followed by a list of arguments.
To indicate optional arguments, square brackets are commonly used, and can also be used to group parameters that must be specified together.
To indicate required arguments, angled brackets are commonly used, following the same grouping conventions as square brackets.
Exclusive parameters can be indicated by separating them with vertical bars within groups.
A usage statement is not an error message, and thus it should generally only be printed when specifically requested by the user (via --help, or -h, or -?, or some similar flag or argument). It should be written to the standard output;[1][2] if the user has entered an incorrect command, the program should ideally respond with a succinct error message that describes the exact error made by the user rather than printing the usage statement and requiring the user to figure out what the mistake was. If the user fails to pass the correct number of arguments, for example, a single line stating that an argument is missing is far more useful than several pages of output providing a general usage.