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For some crazy reason I can't find a way to get a list of files with a glob for a given directory.

I'm currently stuck with something along the lines of:

NSString *bundleRoot = [[NSBundle mainBundle] bundlePath];
NSArray *dirContents = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] 
                        directoryContentsAtPath:bundleRoot];

..and then stripping out the stuff I don't want, which sucks. But what I'd really like is to be able to search for something like "foo*.jpg" instead of asking for the entire directory, but I've not been able to find anything like that.

So how the heck do you do it?

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4 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

You can achieve this pretty easily with the help of NSPredicate, like so:

NSString *bundleRoot = [[NSBundle mainBundle] bundlePath];
NSArray *dirContents = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] directoryContentsAtPath:bundleRoot];
NSArray *onlyJPGs = [dirContents filteredArrayUsingPredicate:[NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"self ENDSWITH '.jpg'"];
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vote up 1 vote down

What about using NSString's hasSuffix and hasPrefix methods? Something like (if you're searching for "foo*.jpg"):

NSString *bundleRoot = [[NSBundle mainBundle] bundlePath];
NSArray *dirContents = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] directoryContentsAtPath:bundleRoot];
for (NSString *tString in dirContents) {
    if ([tString hasPrefix:@"foo"] && [tString hasSuffix:@".jpg"]) {

        // do stuff

    }
}

For simple, straightforward matches like that it would be simpler than using a regex library.

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vote up 0 vote down

You need to roll your own method to eliminate the files you don't want.

This isn't easy with the built in tools, but you could use RegExKit Lite to assist with finding the elements in the returned array you are interested in. According to the release notes this should work in both Cocoa and Cocoa-Touch applications.

Here's the demo code I wrote up in about 10 minutes. I changed the < and > to " because they weren't showing up inside the pre block, but it still works with the quotes. Maybe somebody who knows more about formatting code here on StackOverflow will correct this (Chris?).

This is a "Foundation Tool" Command Line Utility template project. If I get my git daemon up and running on my home server I'll edit this post to add the URL for the project.

#import "Foundation/Foundation.h"
#import "RegexKit/RegexKit.h"

@interface MTFileMatcher : NSObject 
{
}
- (void)getFilesMatchingRegEx:(NSString*)inRegex forPath:(NSString*)inPath;
@end

int main (int argc, const char * argv[])
{
    NSAutoreleasePool * pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];

    // insert code here...
    MTFileMatcher* matcher = [[[MTFileMatcher alloc] init] autorelease];
    [matcher getFilesMatchingRegEx:@"^.+\\.[Jj][Pp][Ee]?[Gg]$" forPath:[@"~/Pictures" stringByExpandingTildeInPath]];

    [pool drain];
    return 0;
}

@implementation MTFileMatcher
- (void)getFilesMatchingRegEx:(NSString*)inRegex forPath:(NSString*)inPath;
{
    NSArray* filesAtPath = [[[NSFileManager defaultManager] directoryContentsAtPath:inPath] arrayByMatchingObjectsWithRegex:inRegex];
    NSEnumerator* itr = [filesAtPath objectEnumerator];
    NSString* obj;
    while (obj = [itr nextObject])
    {
    	NSLog(obj);
    }
}
@end
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vote up 1 vote down

I won't pretend to be an expert on the topic, but you should have access to both the glob and wordexp function from objective-c, no?

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