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I need to do a find in files. I want to ignore or exclude generated files, like JAX-WS artifacts or classes in target folders. How can I tell IDEA to exclude these files from the find?

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    Yes! And they always put the generated results on TOP! Sheesh!
    – SMBiggs
    Oct 16, 2015 at 16:28

5 Answers 5

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Create a Custom Scope defining the set of files to include/exclude from your search.

  1. CTRL+SHIFT+F for the Find in Path dialog. (Mac users press command+shift+F)
  2. Under Scope select Custom.

    Find in Path

  3. Choose a scope from the drop down list or create a Custom Scope by clicking on the ... button to the right of dropdown.

  4. In the dialog that appears, click on the + button and select Local
  5. On the right pane you can Include and Exclude individual files and Recursively include or exclude all files beneath a folder.

Now when you use Find in Path, use your custom scope to restrict which files are searched.

I suspect from the reference to Find in Files in your question that these instructions may not apply to your version but it is useful to know that this functionality exists and there is always the 30 day evaluation version.

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  • 4
    That works. Thanks. I had hoped there was some setting or checkbox I had overlooked to the effect of "ignore generated files".
    – Freiheit
    May 21, 2013 at 21:18
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    @Freiheit You might be able to have your project ignore the generated files too, which would exclude them from searches and the like by default everywhere (unless you like seeing or need your generated files in IntelliJ, of course).
    – ajp15243
    May 21, 2013 at 21:28
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    @ajp15243 This can be done in the settings -> project scope : )
    – Indolering
    Nov 12, 2013 at 7:04
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    For reference, these steps work the exact same in IntelliJ Ultimate 13.
    – kurtzbot
    Aug 1, 2014 at 17:17
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    Thanks! Still works in 2016.2.2. Very helpful when web-files is copied by grunt/nodejs to a new location. Very frustrating to see duplicates.
    – Jonathan
    Aug 29, 2016 at 8:33
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I know this is late to the party, and Rob's answer is a decent one. I'd just like to add the following alternative though: if you chose the Custom scope (as in Rob's answer), then leave the selection at Project Files, this will make IntelliJ search a bit more selectively than by default. I don't know what the exact differences are, but of particular interest is that if you mark a directory as Excluded either using the Modules tab in the Project Structure settings, or by right-clicking on a directory and selecting Mark Directory As -> Excluded.

If the files you want to exclude are in a single or relatively few directories so you can easily manually set up these exclusion rules, this is a really nice way of getting the same result without needing to configure a custom scope.

I tested this in IntelliJ Ultimate 14.1.4. I have no idea how it behaves in other versions, but I suspect most of v14 at least will behave the same.

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  • I marked a directory excluded by mistake, how to include it again. The context option "Mark Directory As" is no longer visible for that directory. Sep 2, 2015 at 1:58
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    @coding_idiot Mark Directory As is still visible to me when I do that (the option to choose is then Cancel Exclusion). If that for some reason doesn't work for you, you should be able to do the same thing by opening the Module settings (Project Settings -> Modules -> <your module>). In that dialogue all excluded folders should be listed on the right with an x next to it to stop the exclusion.
    – Vala
    Sep 2, 2015 at 15:17
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You can also put the search file filter starting with ! sign to exclude. Example to search code not in Test Java files: !*Test.java

If you have a few types of files you can separate with , sign. Example to search in Kotlin and Groovy files only: *.kt,*.groovy

This might be also helpful.

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IntelliJ Skip generated files pattern during searching

I use the next pattern to exclude generated files

!file:*intermediates*/&&!file:*generated*/&&!lib:*..*

[How to add a new pattern follow and skip tests pattern]

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I use this filter to create a custom scope to exclude the target folder in play framework applications:

(src:*..*||test:*..*)&&!file:target//*

Also, this is the language reference for the scope definition language: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/scope-language-syntax-reference.html

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