PathExtractor is a command line tool that extracts a list of files/paths from stdin.
Advantages over fpp:
- It does only one thing : more unixy
- You can use it with any fuzzy finder, such as fzf,peco,percol,pick,selecta
- It doesn't wait for stdin to be finished to output the paths
- It is faster
- It is much smaller (easily understandable)
- You can also use it without a fuzzy finder for programmatic usage
For example, you could write:
git status | pe
to get a list of the files that were added/changed, without all the formating
One of the most common usage is to create an alias that will automatically run :
pe
+ a command line fuzzy finder such as fzf + an action such as opening that file in your favorite editor.
For example, using zsh
, I have as an alias:
alias -g P='| pe | fzf | read filename; [ ! -z $filename ] && vim $filename'
With bash
:
bind '"PP": "| pe | uniq | fzf | while read filename; do [ ! -z $filename ] && </dev/tty vim $filename; done\n'
So that If I run
git status P
or
git status PP
to quickly open one of the changed files in vim
Other usage ideas:
With zsh:
# Copy selected path to clipboard
alias -g C='| pe | fzf | read filename; [ ! -z $filename ] && echo -n $filename | xclip -selection c'
With bash:
bind '"CC": "| pe | fzf | read filename; [ ! -z $filename ] && echo -n $filename | xclip -selection c\n"'
go install github.com/edi9999/path-extractor@latest
# sudo mv "$(which path-extractor)" /usr/bin/pe
You will have the path-extractor
in your $GOPATH/bin
directory which you can rename or alias to pe