importmagic.el
rg.el
importmagic.el | rg.el | |
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2 | 9 | |
69 | 461 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.2 | |
about 1 year ago | 5 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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importmagic.el
rg.el
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From Doom to Vanilla Emacs
Sometimes I don't know exactly how to configure a package or which options I should be using. Instead of searching the web for the examples last year I came up with an idea: I started collecting interesting/useful dotfiles~/~dotemacs collections in a single place. You can find the repository at github.com/dorneanu/dotemacs. So what I usually do is to search inside the folder where I've cloned all repositories for specific keywords. For this purpose I use rg.el and some custom function:
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Ripgrep with glob patterns doesnot seem to work for me
I am a newbie to emacs and just last week i installed and learning about emacs. I wanted to search for text across multiple files and exclude certain file types. I have been trying to use https://github.com/dajva/rg.el
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Navigating an enormous code base
rg.el or deadgrep: Emacs interfaces to ripgrep, a grep-like tool that is very fast. This lets us search across a large number of files for a pattern of text. The disadvantage of searching for text is that if you are looking for the method called foo and there are hundreds of them that exist, it can be hard to know which one you really want. On the other hand, at the scale and complexity that you are talking about, I can imagine that more IDE-like tools just start failing.
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If you have never used wgrep with rg.el to rename a function in several files, try it | that will blow your mind
In this post we see how to rename interactively a function that appears in several files using rg.el and wgrep!
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ripgrep is fantastic | Emacs is fantastic | BOOM you get the fantastic rg.el
rg.el is an Emacs UI for the cli ripgrep.
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Recreated Vim Workflow. What else is cool?
Oh that's a good point about quickfix. I do end up going back to vim for that sort of thing too I guess. In emacs I did setup https://github.com/dajva/rg.el which gives you https://rgel.readthedocs.io/en/2.1.0/usage.html#results-buffer to look through results but I've never tried to do something like cnext/cfdo/colder/cnewer in emacs.
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Is there a magit-like interface for grep?
I use a different ripgrep integration, rg. It has a menu using transient, just like magit (set it up with (rg-enable-menu)). It makes rerunning the searches with different parameters easy.
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Is it possible to search text into OCRed PDFs? How?
You can use the rg.el and change the executable to use the ripgrep-all. For example:
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Weekly tips/trick/etc/ thread
Another option is https://github.com/dajva/rg.el
What are some alternatives?
auto-complete - Emacs auto-complete package
deadgrep - fast, friendly searching with ripgrep and Emacs
quelpa - Build and install your Emacs Lisp packages on-the-fly directly from source
dumb-jump - an Emacs "jump to definition" package for 50+ languages
pdfgrep - PDFGrep is a GNU/Emacs module providing grep comparable facilities but for PDF files
emacs-solaire-mode - If only certain buffers could be so grossly incandescent.
urgrep - Universal recursive grep for Emacs
use-package - A use-package declaration for simplifying your .emacs
emacs-find-file-rg - Find file in current project using rg --files command
meghanada-emacs - A Better Java Development Environment for Emacs
counsel-ag-popup - The power of searching with ag using counsel with transient popups Magit style.