ivy-quick-find-files.el | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
README.org |
ivy-quick-find-files.el
- Introduction
- Motivation
- Installation
- Customizing
- I don’t want to use Ivy, I want to use <insert ivy alternative here>
- Upcoming changes
- License
Introduction
ivy-quick-find-files.el
is a utility package for all of you out there
that often find themselves looking for the right file in the right
place, but you can’t be bothered to have a specific keybinding for
that particular file for one reason or another.
Now, you have a utility for finding files by directory with an
associated extension! Let’s say you often open files with a .org
extension from your directory ~/org/
, this package will try to find it
insantly for you!
Motivation
I often find myself opening a specific set of files, but they are too numerous to make each one of them a keybinding. Well, I actually could, but I end up with way too much for my taste. In fact, at the time I’m writing this, I would have to manage a hundred keybindings for my various org files alone! Unmanageable!
Installation
Prerequisites
First of all, make sure either find
(which is fairly standard, it
should be there by default) or fd are installed on your system, as
this package relies on one or the other depending on your choices
(find
by default).
Local installation
The vanilla way of installing this package would be to clone this
repository somewhere in your Emacs’ load-path
, or add the following
line to your .emacs
or init.el
:
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/ivy-quick-find-files.el")
Then add the following lines to your .emacs
or init.el
:
(require 'ivy-quick-find-files)
Straight + use-package
My personnal choice in terms of installing packages is using straight
with use-package. If you are using it too, add the following code to
your .emacs
or init.el
:
(use-package ivy-quick-find-files
:defer t
:ensure t
:straight (ivy-quick-find-files :type git
:host github
:repo "Phundrak/ivy-quick-find-files.el")
:config ; Depending on your preferences of course
(setq ivy-quick-find-files-program 'fd
ivy-quick-find-files-dirs-and-exts '(("~/org" . "org"))))
Other methods
I am aware other methods are available for installing packages in
Emacs, such as quelpa
or Spacemacs’ and DoomEmacs’ package managers,
however I am yet unsure how to install this package with them. If you
do, feel free to submit a PR with new instructions!
Customizing
A couple of variables can be editer by the user in order to configure
ivy-quick-find-files.el
:
-
ivy-quick-find-files-program
- The program to use in order to find
your files. The two currently supported options are
'find
and'fd
. -
ivy-quick-find-files-fd-executable
- Specify the executable to use
when using the option
'fd
. -
ivy-quick-find-files-find-executable
- Specify the executable to
use when using the option
'find
. -
ivy-quick-find-files-dirs-and-exts
-
List of pairs between directories and extensions. For one directory, the program will be searching recursively all files with the specified extension. Possible value:
'(("~/org" . "org") ("/tmp" . "html") ("~/code/C" . "h"))
This specific example will recursively search for all
.org
files in~/org
, all.html
files in/tmp
, and all.h
files in~/code/C
.
I don’t want to use Ivy, I want to use <insert ivy alternative here>
You can still use this package then! I made the function
ivy-quick-find-files-list-files
specifically for this kind of
situation. For instance, if you are an ido user, you could write an
ido-quick-find-files-list-files
function like so:
(defun my/ido-quick-find-files ()
(interactive)
(find-file (ido-completing-read "Open file: "
(ivy-quick-find-files-list-files))))
Upcoming changes
Plans exist to customize the maximum depth at which find
and fd
are to
search for files.
License
ivy-quick-find-files.el
is available under the GNU GPL-3.0
license. You can find the full text in LICENSE.md.