Reputation: 12466
Suppose I'm searching a class JFactory
inside a folder and it's sub-directories.
How can I file that file which contains class JFactory
?
I don't want to replace that word but I need to find that file that contains class JFactory
.
Upvotes: 70
Views: 60110
Reputation: 901
The Silver Searcher(https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher) highly recommended, really fast!
install
sudo pacman -S the_silver_searcher // arch linux
sudo apt install silversearcher-ag // ubuntu
usage
$ ag keywords
integrate with vim
rking/ag.vim (https://github.com/rking/ag.vim)
after installing
:Ag keywords
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 5440
Open the command line window by:
Esc - to enssure you are in Normal mode
type q , type :
the command line should open ( it like a tmp file to write the command you can navigate as you would navigate normally in any vim file ...
type i to enter insert mode
this example will search for the to_srch string recursively bellow the current dir for all file types of type '.js' and '.java' but omit all file paths containing the string node_modules
:g/console.log/ | :vimgrep /console.log/ `find . -type f -name '*.js' -o -name '*.java' -not -path '*node_modules/*'`
Now wheen you :copen you could navigate with the arrow keys through the sarch results ...
you could also set those in .vimrc
" how-to search recursively under the current dir for the files of type js and java but omit the
" node_modules file paths
":g/console.log/ | :vimgrep /console.log/ `find . -type f -name '*.js' -o -name '*.java' -not -path '*node_modules/*'`
" reminder open the quick fix window by :copen 20
" reminder close the quick fix window by :ccl
you could omit the first :q/to_srch/ I use it to highlight the search results automatically since I have "set hlsearch" in my ~/.vimrc
Any hint how-to enable automatically the srch results from the vimgrep or in vimrc will be highly appreciated ...
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 79215
:vimgrep /JFactory/ **/*.java
You can replace the pattern /JFactory/
with /\<JFactory\>/
if you want full word match. :vim
is shorthand for :vimgrep
.
If JFactory
or \<JFactory\>
is your current search pattern (for example you have hit *
on one occurrence) you can use an empty search pattern: :vimgrep // **/*.java
, it will use last search pattern instead. Handy!
Warning: :vimgrep
will trigger autocmds if enabled. This can slow down the search. If you don't want that you can do:
:noautocmd vimgrep /\<JFactory\>/ **/*.java
which will be quicker. But: it won't trigger syntax highlighting or open gz
files ungzipped, etc.
Note that if you want an external program to grep your pattern you can do something like the following:
:set grepprg=ack
:grep --java JFactory
Ack
is a Perl-written alternative to grep. Note that then, you will have to switch to Perl regexes.
Once the command of your choice returned, you can browse the search results with those commands described in the Vim documentation at :help quickfix
. Lookup :cfirst
, :cnext
, :cprevious
, :cnfile
, etc.
2014 update: there are now new ways to do that with the_silver_searcher
or the_platinum_searcher
and either ag.vim
or unite.vim
plugins.
Upvotes: 98
Reputation: 545
From the project root folder, run following:
grep -H -r 'what_you_search' * | less
You will get a list of folders and matching lines with that string.
Upvotes: 21