pdfgrep
fsearch
pdfgrep | fsearch | |
---|---|---|
5 | 52 | |
43 | 3,128 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.5 | |
over 1 year ago | 12 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
pdfgrep
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Recoll ā Full-text search for your desktop
I use this script to make recoll produce pdfgrep-like output so that I can use it with Emacs and pdfgrep.el. This gives a nice interactive way to search through thousands of pdf files.
https://github.com/jeremy-compostella/pdfgrep/pull/8#issueco...
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Pdfgrep ā a commandline utility to search text in PDF files
For Emacs users there is also https://github.com/jeremy-compostella/pdfgrep which lets you browse the results and open the original docs highlighting the selected match.
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Search multiple selected pdfs in Org mode Emacs at the same time?
Pdfgrep is another option. It's a command line utility. I think you can just give it the file name of a certain number of PDFs and it'll search through them. There's apparently a pdfgrep mode and Helm apparently has pdfgrep as well. I'm not sure if any will search all open PDF buffers rather than a directory though.
- pdfgrep: Emacs module providing grep comparable facilities but for PDF files
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Is it possible to search text into OCRed PDFs? How?
The eMacs interface can be found here: https://github.com/jeremy-compostella/pdfgrep (sorry, Iām too lazy to see if someone has created a package for this).
fsearch
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Fsearch, a fast file search utility for Unix-like systems
Hi, author here.
Likely the most significant benefit is the more powerful query language. For example you can also search by file modification date or size and use boolean operators. https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch/wiki/Search-syntax
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Bfs 3.0: The Fastest Find Yet
Yes, FSearch is the one I use, but it's not as great, per FSearch's dev:
> However, FSearch doesn't automatically detect changes made to the file system and update its index then. This is on the roadmap (it's called inotify support) but it'll never work as smooth as Everything on Windows, because the Linux kernel isn't particularly good at reporting filesystem changes
https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch/issues/26
Everything is comprehensive + instant + always up-to-date, that's so awesome a combo it's a pity it's Windows only
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Copy all mp3-files from several subdirectories into a single directory
If you are new and wish a simple way to search, fsearch is a very nice tool.... https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch
- Ideas for activities for a University Linux Club
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Trying to install Fsearch, but getting an apt-key/gpg error
You might consider grabbing the latest release at https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch/releases.
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How and why am I seeing files that I have no access to?
One other program I've been particularly enjoying recently is fsearch : https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch
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baloo is using 36 GB space, is that normal?
If you don't need content indexing, Fsearch is an alternative. I've been using it for over a year now and it's been working flawlessly. Results are near instant and the db is in single digit megabytes.
- Why searching on Gnome sucks and what can be done to improve it?
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Does Linux have an equivalent of MFT on NTFS in Windows?
But AFAIK nothing seems to use this, def not fsearch, they have an open issue - https://github.com/cboxdoerfer/fsearch/issues/26
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Name the tools you can't live without!
Still remember those days of arguing on /g/ where linux longbeards stallman fanboys tried to say how this or that tool was good search... but I dont want to just find something, I want to use it that second, and I want the entire system indexed... after getting some webms to showcase that instant feel it got the message across, though later someone appeared with some dmenu trickery being similarly fast and useful... anyway Fsearch that appeared soon after me is the real deal.
What are some alternatives?
ripgrep-all - rga: ripgrep, but also search in PDFs, E-Books, Office documents, zip, tar.gz, etc.
ANGRYsearch - Linux file search, instant results as you type
rg.el - Emacs search tool based on ripgrep
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
docquery - An easy way to extract information from documents
f2 - F2 is a cross-platform command-line tool for batch renaming files and directories quickly and safely. Written in Go!
pdf-keywords-extractor
edit-filenames - Renames or moves files using a text editor.
recoll-webui - web interface for recoll desktop search
Drill - Search files without indexing, but fast crawling
dumb-jump - an Emacs "jump to definition" package for 50+ languages
QDirStat - QDirStat - Qt-based directory statistics (KDirStat without any KDE - from the original KDirStat author)