Walk a directory/Recursively: Difference between revisions
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#load "str.cma" |
#load "str.cma" |
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open Unix |
open Unix |
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let walk_directory_tree dir pattern = |
let walk_directory_tree dir pattern = |
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let select str = Str.string_match (Str.regexp pattern) str 0 in |
let select str = Str.string_match (Str.regexp pattern) str 0 in |
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let acc = ref [] in |
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let rec walk dir = |
let rec walk dir = |
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let contents = Array.to_list (Sys.readdir dir) in |
let contents = Array.to_list (Sys.readdir dir) in |
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in |
in |
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let matched = List.filter (select) files in |
let matched = List.filter (select) files in |
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(* recursively walk into sub-directories: *) |
(* recursively walk into sub-directories: *) |
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let results = |
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List.fold_left (fun acc dir -> |
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let sub_result = walk dir in |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
in |
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(results) |
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in |
in |
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walk dir |
walk dir |
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(!acc) |
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;; |
;; |
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List.iter print_endline results; |
List.iter print_endline results; |
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;;</ocaml> |
;;</ocaml> |
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=={{header|Perl}}== |
=={{header|Perl}}== |
Revision as of 01:23, 8 August 2008
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Walk a given directory tree and print files matching a given pattern.
Note: Please be careful when running any code examples found here.
Bash
tree -fi /usr/share/man/ | grep printf /usr/share/man/fr/man1/printf.1.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/asprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/dprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/fprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/fwprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/printf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/snprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/sprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/swprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vasprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vdprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vfprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vfwprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vsnprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vsprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vswprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/vwprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/fr/man3/wprintf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/man1/printf.1.bz2 /usr/share/man/man3/ber_printf.3.bz2 /usr/share/man/man3/curl_mprintf.3.bz2
D
module std.file provide different walk directory functions (listdir).
This one recursively walk the directory, which can either match by regular expression or unix shell style pattern.
import std.stdio; import std.file; import std.regexp; void main(string[] args) { auto path = args.length > 1 ? args[1] : "." ; // default current auto pattern = args.length > 2 ? args[2] : "*.*"; // default all file bool useRegExp = (args.length > 3 && args[3] == "-re") ; // pattern matching method if (args.length > 3 && args[3] == "-re") // use Regular Expression foreach (d; listdir(path, RegExp(pattern))) writefln(d); else // use unix shell style pattern matching foreach (d; listdir(path, pattern)) writefln(d); }
This one does not itself walk into sub directory, but can be recursive by a callback delegate function.
import std.stdio; import std.file; import std.regexp; import std.path ; void main(string[] args) { auto path = args.length > 1 ? args[1] : "." ; // default current auto pattern = args.length > 2 ? args[2] : "*.*"; // default all file bool useRegExp = (args.length > 3 && args[3] == "-re") ; // pattern matching method bool recursive = (args.length <= 4 || args[4] != "-nr") ; // recursive? bool matchNPrint(DirEntry* de) { bool bPrint = false ; if(!de.isdir) { if(useRegExp){ if(search(de.name, pattern)) // this _search_ from regexp module writefln(de.name) ; }else{ if(fnmatch(de.name, pattern)) // this _fnmatch_ from path module writefln(de.name) ; } } else if(recursive) listdir(de.name, &matchNPrint) ; // recursive sub dir return true ; // continue } listdir(path, &matchNPrint) ; }
E
def walkTree(directory, pattern) { for name => file in directory { if (name =~ rx`.*$pattern.*`) { println(file.getPath()) } if (file.isDirectory()) { walkTree(file, pattern) } } }
Example:
? walkTree(<file:/usr/share/man>, "rmdir") /usr/share/man/man1/rmdir.1 /usr/share/man/man2/rmdir.2
Forth
Todo: track the full path and print it on matching files.
defer ls-filter : dots? ( name len -- ? ) dup 1 = if drop c@ [char] . = else 2 = if dup c@ [char] . = swap 1+ c@ [char] . = and else drop false then then ; : ls-r ( dir len -- ) open-dir if drop exit then ( dirid) begin dup pad 256 rot read-dir throw while pad over dots? 0= if \ ignore current and parent dirs pad over recurse pad over ls-filter if cr pad swap type else drop then else drop then repeat drop close-dir throw ; : c-file? ( str len -- ? ) dup 3 < if 2drop false exit then + 1- dup c@ 32 or dup [char] c <> swap [char] h <> and if drop false exit then 1- dup c@ [char] . <> if drop false exit then drop true ; ' c-file? is ls-filter s" ." ls-r
Groovy
Print all text files in the current directory tree
new File('.').eachFileRecurse { if (it.name =~ /.*\.txt/) println it; }
IDL
result = file_search( directory, '*.txt', count=cc )
This will descend down the directory/ies in the variable "directory" (which can be an array) returning an array of strings with the names of the files matching "*.txt" and placing the total number of matches into the variable "cc"
Java
Done using no pattern. But with end string comparison which gave better results.
import java.io.File; public class MainEntry { public static void main(String[] args) { walkin(new File("/home/user")); //Replace this with a suitable directory } /** * Recursive function to descent into the directory tree and find all the file * that end with ".mp3" * @param dir A file object defining the top directory **/ public static void walkin(File dir) { String pattern = ".mp3"; File listFile[] = dir.listFiles(); if(listFile != null) { for(int i=0; i<listFile.length; i++) { if(listFile[i].isDirectory()) { walkin(listFile[i]); } else { if(listFile[i].getName().endsWith(pattern)) { System.out.println(listFile[i].getPath()); } } } } } }
MAXScript
fn walkDir dir pattern = ( dirArr = GetDirectories (dir + "\\*") for d in dirArr do ( join dirArr (getDirectories (d + "\\*")) ) append dirArr (dir + "\\") -- Need to include the original top level directory for f in dirArr do ( print (getFiles (f + pattern)) ) ) walkDir "C:" "*.txt"
OCaml
<ocaml>#!/usr/bin/env ocaml
- load "unix.cma"
- load "str.cma"
open Unix
let walk_directory_tree dir pattern =
let select str = Str.string_match (Str.regexp pattern) str 0 in let rec walk dir = let contents = Array.to_list (Sys.readdir dir) in let contents = List.rev_map (Filename.concat dir) contents in let dirs, files = List.fold_left (fun (dirs,files) f -> match (stat f).st_kind with | S_REG -> (dirs, f::files) (* Regular file *) | S_DIR -> (f::dirs, files) (* Directory *) | _ -> (dirs, files) ) ([],[]) contents in let matched = List.filter (select) files in (* recursively walk into sub-directories: *) let results = List.fold_left (fun acc dir -> let sub_result = walk dir in List.rev_append sub_result acc ) matched dirs in (results) in walk dir
let () =
let results = walk_directory_tree "/usr/local/lib/ocaml" ".*\\.cma" in List.iter print_endline results;
- </ocaml>
Perl
use File::Find qw(find); my $dir = '.'; my $pattern = 'foo'; find sub {print $File::Find::name if /$pattern/}, $dir;
Pop11
Builtin procedure sys_file_match searches directories or directory trees using shell-like patterns (three dots indicate search for subdirectory tree).
lvars repp, fil; ;;; create path repeater sys_file_match('.../*.p', '', false, 0) -> repp; ;;; iterate over paths while (repp() ->> fil) /= termin do ;;; print the path printf(fil, '%s\n'); endwhile;
Python
This uses the standard os.walk() "generator".
import fnmatch import os rootPath = '/' pattern = '*.mp3' # Can include any UNIX shell-style wildcards for root, dirs, files in os.walk(rootPath): for filename in files: if fnmatch.fnmatch(filename, pattern): print os.path.join(root, filename)
A more strictly comparable port of this 2.5 code to earlier versions of Python would be:
from fnmatch import fnmatch import os, os.path def print_fnmatches(pattern, dir, files): for filename in files: if fnmatch(name, pattern): print os.path.join(dir, filename) os.path.walk('/', print_fnmatches, '*.mp3')
(Note: This uses a non-standard replacement to the os.path module)
from path import path rootPath = '/' pattern = '*.mp3' d = path(rootPath) for f in d.walkfiles(pattern): print f
Ruby
Pattern matching using regular expressions
#define a recursive function that will traverse the directory tree def printAndDescend(pattern) #we keep track of the directories, to be used in the second, recursive part of this function directories=[] Dir['*'].sort.each do |name| if File.file?(name) and name[pattern] puts(File.expand_path(name)) elsif File.directory?(name) directories << name end end directories.each do |name| #don't descend into . or .. on linux Dir.chdir(name){printAndDescend(pattern)} if !Dir.pwd[File.expand_path(name)] end end #print all ruby files printAndDescend(/.+\.rb$/)
Or use the Find core Module
require 'find' def find_and_print(path, pattern) Find.find(path) do |entry| if File.file?(entry) and entry[pattern] puts entry end end end # print all the ruby files find_and_print(".", /.+\.rb$/)
Or, to find and print all files under '/foo/bar' the easy way:
Dir.glob( File.join('/foo/bar', '**', '*') ) { |file| puts file }
Scala
This is not implemented in the Scala library. Here is a possible solution, building on class java.io.File and on scala language and library iteration facilities
package io.utils import java.io.File /** A wrapper around file, allowing iteration either on direct children or on directory tree */ class RichFile(file: File) { def children = new Iterable[File] { def elements = if (file.isDirectory) file.listFiles.elements else Iterator.empty; } def andTree : Iterable[File] = ( Seq.single(file) ++ children.flatMap(child => new RichFile(child).andTree)) } /** implicitely enrich java.io.File with methods of RichFile */ object RichFile { implicit def toRichFile(file: File) = new RichFile(file) }
Class RichFile gets a java.io.File in constructor. Its two methods returns Iterables on items of type File. children allow iterations on the direct children (empty if file is not a directory). andTree contains file and all files below, as a concatenation (++) of a a sequence which contains only file (Seq.single) and actual descendants. Method flatMap in Iterable takes a function argument which associates each item (child) to another Iterable (andTree called recursively on that child) and returns the concatenation of those iterables.
The purpose of object RichFile is to publish implicit method toRichFile. When this method is available in scope (after import RichFile.toRichFile or import RichFile._), it is called behind the scene when a method of class RichFile is called on an instance of type File : with f of type File, code f.children (resp. f.andTree) becomes toRichFile(f).children (resp. toRichFile(f).andTree). It is as if class File had been added the methods of class RichFile.
Using it :
package test.io.utils import io.utils.RichFile._ // this makes implicit toRichFile active import java.io.File object Test extends Application { val root = new File("/home/user") for(f <- root.andTree) Console.println(f) // filtering comes for free for(f <- root.andTree; if f.getName.endsWith(".mp3")) Console.println(f) }
Tcl
proc walkin { fromDir } { foreach fname [glob -nocomplain -directory $fromDir *] { if { [file isdirectory $fname] } { walkin $fname } else { if { [string match *.mp3 $fname] } { puts [file normalize $fname] } } } } # replace directory with something appropriate walkin /home/user
Visual Basic .NET
Platform: .NET
This uses the OS pattern matching
Sub walkTree(ByVal directory As IO.DirectoryInfo, ByVal pattern As String) For Each file In directory.GetFiles(pattern) Console.WriteLine(file.FullName) Next For Each subDir In directory.GetDirectories walkTree(subDir, pattern) Next End Sub
UnixPipes
Find accepts file globbing params too as -name, here I use regexp from grep.
find . | grep '.*\.txt$'