vimrc/sources_non_forked/ack.vim/README.md
2015-07-13 11:22:46 +01:00

5.4 KiB

ack.vim

Run your favorite search tool from Vim, with an enhanced results list.

This plugin was designed as a Vim frontend for the Perl module App::Ack. Ack can be used as a replacement for 99% of the uses of grep. The plugin allows you to run ack from Vim, and shows the results in a split window.

But here's a little secret for the Vim-seasoned: it's just a light wrapper for Vim's grepprg and the quickfix window for match results. This makes it easy to integrate with your own Vim configuration and use existing knowledge of core features. It also means the plugin is flexible to use with other search tools.

Installation

Ack

You will need ack (>= 2.0), of course. To install it follow the manual.

The Plugin

It is recommended to use one of the popular plugin managers for Vim. There are many and you probably already have a preferred one, but a few examples for your copy-and-paste convenience:

Pathogen

$ git clone https://github.com/mileszs/ack.vim.git ~/.vim/bundle/ack.vim

Vundle

Plugin 'mileszs/ack.vim'

NeoBundle

NeoBundle 'mileszs/ack.vim'

Download the plugin and extract it in ~/.vim/ (or %PROGRAMFILES%/Vim/vimfiles on Windows).

Usage

:Ack [options] {pattern} [{directories}]

Search recursively in {directories} (which defaults to the current directory) for the {pattern}.

Files containing the search term will be listed in the quickfix window, along with the line number of the occurrence, once for each occurrence. <Enter> on a line in this window will open the file, and place the cursor on the matching line.

Just like where you use :grep, :grepadd, :lgrep, and :lgrepadd, you can use :Ack, :AckAdd, :LAck, and :LAckAdd respectively. (See :help Ack after installing, or doc/ack.txt in the repo, for more information.)

For more ack help see ack documentation.

Keyboard Shortcuts

The quickfix results window is augmented with these convenience mappings:

?    a quick summary of these keys, repeat to close
o    to open (same as Enter)
O    to open and close the quickfix window
go   to preview file, open but maintain focus on ack.vim results
t    to open in new tab
T    to open in new tab without moving to it
h    to open in horizontal split
H    to open in horizontal split, keeping focus on the results
v    to open in vertical split
gv   to open in vertical split, keeping focus on the results
q    to close the quickfix window

Gotchas

Some characters have special meaning, and need to be escaped in your search pattern. For instance, #. You need to escape it with :Ack '\\\#define foo' to search for '#define foo'. See issue #5.

Possibly FAQ

Can I use ag (The Silver Searcher) with this?

Absolutely, and probably other tools if their output is similar or you can write a pattern match for it--just set g:ackprg. If you like, you can fall back to Ack in case you use your vimrc on a system without Ag available:

if executable('ag')
  let g:ackprg = 'ag --vimgrep'
endif

Since Ack is quite portable you might check a copy of it into your dotfiles repository in ~/bin so you'll nearly always have it available.

What's the difference from ag.vim?

Well... not a lot really.

Present maintainer, yours truly, kind of wishes they never forked, contributes to both, and wouldn't mind seeing them merged again. ag.vim got a nice code clean-up (which ack.vim is now hopefully getting), and ack.vim picked up a few features that haven't made their way to ag.vim, like :AckWindow, optional background search execution with vim-dispatch, and auto-previewing.

Changelog

Please see the Github releases page.

1.0.9 (unreleased)

  • Fix location list and layout of quickfix when using Dispatch (#154)
  • Fix the quick help overlay clobbering the list mappings
  • Fix :AckFile when using Dispatch
  • Restore original 'makeprg' and 'errorformat' when using Dispatch
  • Arrow keys also work for auto-preview (#158)
  • Internal refactoring and clean-up

Credits

This plugin is derived from Antoine Imbert's blog post Ack and Vim Integration (in particular, the function in the update to the post). Miles Sterrett packaged it up as a plugin and documented it in Vim's help format, and since then many contributors have submitted enhancements and fixes.

And of course, where would we be without Ack. And, you know, Vim.