Ackr is the very minimum subset of grep/ack/rak I can think of for lazy developers.
Description
Grep is a great tool. A very powerful tool. But most of the time, it is too powerful for my needs. I can never remember its syntax nor its options.
Ack is great and powerful too. But here again it has so many options.
As a developer I have really simple needs. As a lazy developer I want the most possible simple tool.
Here comes ackr:
- Ackr look for a search term into all text files, into all subfolders, from the working directory
- A search term is either a string (in this case Ackr is case insensitive) or a regexp
- Ackr has no options
- Ackr doesn't search inside hidden folders, but looks to hidden files
- Search term is displayed in bold font
It runs on unixes. I guess it won't run on windows.
And one more thing: ackr is not a replacement to grep/ack. If you need grep power, just use grep!
Install
gem install ackr
Usage
To look for a string (case insensitive):
$ ackr fixme
lib/ackr/search.rb
8| # FIXME Separate behaviours: search / print
README.markdown
21| $ ackr fixme
Using a regexp (same search as above):
$ ackr /fixme/i
If you want to search only in a specific directory, you can temporarily
cd
into it like this:
(cd your/path && ackr yoursearch)
Tips
To look for a string containing spaces, quote the string:
$ ackr 'string with spaces'
To look for a regex containing spaces, quote the regex:
$ ackr '/regex with spaces/'
or escape the spaces:
$ ackr /regex\ with\ spaces/
When your search string contains some characters special to Bash you will have troubles. For example, instead of:
$ ackr &:active
you must use:
$ ackr '&:active'
Ignored files and directories
Ackr doesn't look into directories. In addition, ackr ignores the following list of directories:
blib
CVS
_darcs
RCS
SCCS
pkg
tmp
temp
log
If you want to search into such a directory anyway, simply cd
into it and make the search.
Caveats
Ackr is slow, very slow... May be I will consider performance in a future version.
License
MIT
Questions and/or Comments
Feel free to email Xavier Nayrac with any questions, or contact me on twitter.