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What are some options for getting really fast 'Find in Files' searching in VIM?

Our codebase is large enough that searching needs to work off an index. grep/vimgrep/etc are too slow.

Indexing doesn't need to be particularly fast; I can index overnight.

Thanks,

[EDIT] I'm also working in a Windows environment.

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5 Answers

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If it's source code (rather than full text search), then ctags with the TagList plugin should work well for your needs. See, for example:

http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/04/ctags-taglist-vi-vim-editor-as-sourece-code-browser/

EDIT: TagList and ctags will work on Windows as well (that's what I use). See the TagList install page and FAQ. The following links might prove useful:

There's also a TagList forum where you can get further help:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/taglist/

I set it up on my windows machine a while back, but I don't remember encountering any problems.

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I don't know how I found this, but looks like someone has written a plugin for google desktop

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If you're working with a large codebase, then it might be time to look for a more powerful solution than conventional tools. OpenGrok is a very fast source code search and cross-reference engine. On top of its great performance, it integrates with Subversion, Mercurial, and ClearCase, among other source revision control software. It sounds a lot like something you could use.

If you want support to use OpenGrok from within Vim, you could easily write a vim function that would call system() to start the search for you. To read more about writing new vim commands, look up :help 40.2 within vim.

I hope that's what you were looking for.

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Something that I use, but not through vim, is ack: http://betterthangrep.com/

It is a perl based tool, and it should be usable in Windows.

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A langauge-sensitive source code search engine can be found at SD Source Code Search Engine. It can handle many languages at the same time. Searches can be performed for patterns in a specific langauge, or patterns across languages (such as "find identifiers involving TAX"). By being sensitive to langauge tokens, the number of false positives is reduced, saving time for the user. It understands C, C++, C#, COBOL, Java, ECMAScript, Java, XML, Verilog, VHDL, and a number of other languages.

While you can't invoke it from within VIM, you can invoke VIM on a hit from its search window.

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