Passing arguments is the easiest of the two (see "What are special dollar sign shell variables?" on SO):
#!/bin/sh
echo "$#"; # total number of arguments
echo "$0"; # name of the shell script
echo "$1"; # first argument
Assuming the file is named "stuff" (sans an extension) and the result of running ./stuff hello world:
3
stuff
hello
To pass in single letter switches (w/ optional associated params), e.g. ./stuff -v -s hello you'll want to use getopts. See "How do you use getopts" on SO and this great tutorial. Here is an example:
#!/bin/sh
verbose=1
string=
while getopts ":vs:" OPT; do
case "$OPT" in
v) verbose=0;;
s) string="$OPTARG";;
esac;
done;
if verbose; then
echo "verbose is on";
fi;
echo "$string";
The line having getopts coupled with while needs further explanation:
while - start the while loop, going through everything getopts returns back after it processes
getopts :vs: OPT; - the program getopts with 2 arguments :vs: and OPT
getopts - returns something while can iterate over
:vs: - the first argument, this describes what switches getopts will look for while it parses the shell line
: - the first colon takes getopts out of debug mode, omit this to make getopts verbose
v - find the switch -v, this will not have an argument after it, just a simple switch
s: - find the option -s with an argument after it
OPT - will store the character used (the name of the switch), e.g. "v" or "s"
OPTARG - the variable to load the value into during each of while's iterations. For v, $OPTARG will not have a value, but for s it will.
The colon : tells getopts to look for an argument after the switch. The only exception is if the sequence of characters starts with : then it toggles getopts in/out of debug/verbose mode. For example:
getopts :q:r:stu:v will take getopts out of debug mode, will tell it that switches q, r, and u will expects args, while s, t, and u won't. This would be applicable for something like: stuff -q hello -r world -s -t -u 123 -v
getopts tuv will only tell getopts to search for switches t, u and v with no arguments, e.g. stuff -t -u -v, and to be verbose