I want to search multiple patterns
in a directory
containing recursive directories
and files
.
I know command for
This should be enough:
ack -R 'string1|string2'
As -R
is the default, you can omit it:
ack 'string1|string2'
From man ack
:
-r, -R, --recurse
Recurse into sub-directories. This is the default and just here for compatibility with grep. You can also use it for turning --no-recurse off.
If you want to get the pattern from a file, say /path/to/patterns.file, you can use:
ack "$(cat /path/to/patterns.file)"
or equivallently:
ack "$(< /path/to/patterns.file)"
I cannot find an exact equivalent to grep -f
.
I don't know why but for my use case, the pipe solution didn't work.
I simply used the output of ack -l
as the input to grep. For example, to quickly find all Javascript files containing string 1
and string 2
:
grep "string 2" `ack -l --js "string 1"`
The ack command can also string along with pipes. For example the first ack finds files containing pattern1 then pipe that to another ack to search just those files for pattern2
ack -l 'pattern1' | ack -x 'pattern2'
The -l parameter means to just list the matching files (instead of the matching text). The -x parameter means to search just the files piped to it. This is similar to narrowing down the files for the next ack search.
ack -l 'pattern1' | ack -xl 'pattern2' | ack -x 'pattern3'
This is an AND operator and not the OR operator given in the other solutions.
For ag
, as of verion 0.19.2 the default is to search in directories and files recursively.
To search for multiple patterns, you can use similiar syntax as ack
ag 'pattern1|pattern2'
will search for both pattern1
and pattern2
.
In case you don't want to search recursively, you can set the search depth to 1 by the switch --depth NUM
Therefore,
ag 'pattern1|pattern2' --depth 1
will only search in the current directory for both patterns.