The :find command of vim just matches only one file. If more files are matched, it gives message "Too many file names" . Is there any command of vim which can find files by using wildcards or regular expression, and allow user to navigate between these files matched?
3 Answers
You seem to be confusing Vim's command-line completion and the :find
command itself.
:find
only accepts one single filename (or something that resolves to a single filename) as argument but the command-line completion that lets you complete that single argument allows you to go through all the files in your path
matching your current pattern.
That confusion makes what you actually want non-obvious:
- do you want
:find
to open for editing every file matching your pattern? - or do you want a list of matches from which to choose from?
The former is impossible by design but you can use the :new
command (:help :new
):
:new *.foo
The latter is possible, of course. For that, you'll need to set at least a few options in your ~/.vimrc
:
set wildmenu
set wildmode=list:full
See :help wildmode
for how to customize the wildmenu's behavior. Those settings will of course work for other commands: :edit
, :split
, :buffer
…
A few suggestions:
set path+=**
lets Vim find files recursively under the other directories in path
. Note that **
is very greedy, which means that Vim will really look everywhere under those directories, which can be very expensive and slow (think node_modules
). As with lots of things in Vim, the path
value should be context-dependant.
set wildignorecase
tells Vim to ignore case for completion: :find foo
will match foo.txt
and Foo.txt
.
set wildignore=*.foo,*.bar
tells Vim to ignore those files (it can be directories) when doing completion.
Finally, here are a bunch of mappings that make my life (in Vim) so easy:
" regex completion instead of whole word completion
nnoremap <leader>f :find *
" restrict the matching to files under the directory
" of the current file, recursively
nnoremap <leader>F :find <C-R>=expand('%:p:h').'/**/*'<CR>
" same as the two above but opens the file in an horizontal window
nnoremap <leader>s :sfind *
nnoremap <leader>S :sfind <C-R>=expand('%:p:h').'/**/*'<CR>
" same as the two above but with a vertical window
nnoremap <leader>v :vert sfind *
nnoremap <leader>V :vert sfind <C-R>=expand('%:p:h').'/**/*'<CR>
Here is how it looks:
-
In case it wasn't clear...with the suggested 'wildmode' and 'wildmenu' settings, you can now just hit
<Tab>
instead of<Enter>
to cycle through a list of all matches to an incomplete:find
command.– BenJun 1, 2014 at 16:01
The findfile
function can return a list, so it's just a matter of calling that in a custom command.
Here's a quick one-liner that will show the list of results from the path and prompt for which one you want ("FF" == Find File):
command! -nargs=1 FF let i=1|let mm=findfile(<q-args>, '', -1)|for f in mm| echo i.':'.f|let i+=1 |endfor|let choice=input('FF: ')|exec 'e ' . mm[choice-1]
Example:
:FF socket.h
1:/usr/include/bits/socket.h
2:/usr/include/asm/socket.h
3:/usr/include/asm-generic/socket.h
4:/usr/include/linux/socket.h
5:/usr/include/sys/socket.h
FF:
Enter the number of the one you want, and hit ENTER. Or just hit ENTER to get the last one.
I use the following self-defined command to find all todo items in the *.g files, and list them in a quickfix window. Then I can jump among them by pressing Enter in the quickfix window.
command! Td noautocmd vimgrep /TODO\|FIXME/j *.g | cw
globpath()
function. To list all python files in the current working directory::echo globpath(".", "*.py")
You can then display that list and either let the user be more specific, or if you're being fancy then let them pick a number to choose which file. Another thing to look into isbrowse confirm e
which is a file browser; Not too familiar with it but there might be something like what you're after somewhere near it.:e
(e
and a space) and then hitting control+d. It will list all files in the current directory. Then type in a shell glob (*.py
for instance). It will list all.py
files. Type in a whole filename and it will open it up.