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Is there a quick way with macvim/NERDtree plugin to find a file?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-07 09:11 出处:网络
What\'s the fastest way to find and open a file with MacVim? NERDtree is a great plugin, but I still have to navigat开发者_StackOverflowe (sometimes very deep) directory trees in order to get to the f

What's the fastest way to find and open a file with MacVim? NERDtree is a great plugin, but I still have to navigat开发者_StackOverflowe (sometimes very deep) directory trees in order to get to the file I want to get to. Is there any functionality that allows me to search a substring of a file name and show me a result set I can click on from that?


Since we are all listing alternatives here, Command-T is another fuzzyfinder-esque plugin that attempts to mimic textmate's find function.

Docs can be found here.


You should also check out the builtin command :find.

First, you need to define what directories to search. If you wish to recursively add the subdirectories of /path/to/project to your search path, use:

:set path=/path/to/project/**

You can then open e.g. /path/to/project/then/some/random/subdirectory/filename.ext by issuing:

:find filename.ext

To open your search result in a new tab or split-screen, try :tabfind or :sfind instead.

Edit

I just noticed that you're looking for fuzzy matching of files, in which case I don't believe :find is up to the task. You may be interested in the :Find function defined in this vimtip though.


I use fuzzyfinder.vim for almost two years and love it a lot.

It supports to find file in fuzzy way, for example to find foobar.rb file, you can just input 'fb' to get foobar.rb matched, for file navigation, you can add "**/" in front of file's name to find a file in any levels deep. It provide more modes to find dir, recent open file, recent vim command, tags etc fuzzily, you can even define your own mode.

If you like TextMate's way, you can read this post for more details.


I used fuzzyfinder for a long time before finding ctrp (https://github.com/kien/ctrlp.vim) You could make a custom finding command that works on linux and window. There are some posible settings of ctrlp - Skip file types or directory - Ignore version control system files (ex: .git, hg,..) - Use external command for making file list (ex: 'find' command in linux) - Cache filelist ...

It is not related to NERDtree plugin that you were talking, but I think you should take a look...


Along the same lines as fuzzyfinder is PeepOpen. I have been using it for a few months and prefer it over fuzzyfinder now. It is strictly mac, and requires Snow Leopard.


I'm using Vim-Plug to manage Vim plugins, there is an awesome fuzzy finder plugin that name is fzf.vim which it is based on fzf. If you use Vim-Plug you can install it as easy as below commands inside .vimrc file:

Plug 'junegunn/fzf', { 'do': './install --bin' }
Plug 'junegunn/fzf.vim'

Then exit Vim and re-open it and write:

:PlugInstall

After true installation you can have any search, documents are here.


I've added the following Nerdtree plugin which integrates grep as one of the options in the Nerdtree menu:

https://gist.github.com/masaakif/414375

Seems to work pretty well, it's equivalent to "grep -r" and you can even select the result and edit the file shown.

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