Files without base name (such as .gitignore
) were excluded from the search. This is no longer the case.
Hidden folders (those whose name starts with a dot) were not excluded from the search when running a full recursive search (i.e. depth
is NULL
or a negative integer). Now they are always excluded.
The argument ext
of the findInFiles
function has been renamed to extensions
and it can be a vector of file extensions now.
The arguments excludePattern
and excludeFoldersPattern
of the findInFiles
function can be some vectors now, to give multiple patterns.
The findInFiles
function has now an argument includePattern
. If a vector of patterns is supplied to this argument, then only the files whose name matches one of these patterns are included in the search.
The findInFiles
function has two new arguments maxCountPerFile
and maxCount
. If an integer is supplied to maxCountPerFile
, then this integer is passed to the --max-count
option of the grep
command and then grep
stops to search in a file whenever it has found maxCountPerFile
results in this file. If an integer is supplied to maxCount
, then only the first maxCount
results found by grep
are returned; but grep
does not stop to search after it has found maxCount
results: it internally returns all the search results, but only the first maxCount
results are returned to the user.
The findInFiles
function has now an alias function named fif
.
Since I most often use the findInFiles
function to search in R files, I added the function fifR
which is the same as findInFiles
with the extensions
argument set to "R"
.
Now the package provides a Shiny application (shinyFIF()
) allowing to run findInFiles
and to navigate in the results.
Added the option --with-filename
to the grep
command. Without this option, the file name does not appear in the output when there is a unique file in the results.
The output
argument must now be one of "viewer"
(the default), "tibble"
, or "viewer+tibble"
. These two latter options allow to get the results of the search in a tibble, in which the matched pattern is colored in red.
The findInFiles
function has a new argument output
. It can be "viewer"
(the default), "dataframe"
, or "viewer+dataframe"
. These two latter options allow to get the results of the search in a dataframe. See the examples.
Support for Solaris, requiring the ‘ggrep’ system command.
Skip on Solaris platforms, because of an issue with the ‘grep’ system command.
First release.