On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 12:46:08PM -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 09/14/12 12:10, Ben Fritz wrote:
> > On Friday, September 14, 2012 12:06:41 PM UTC-5, sc wrote:
> >> On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 12:14:41PM -0400, ping wrote:
> >>> assume I have a tar ball containing muliple files and I don't want
> >>> to uncompress everything in a folder to start my search (since vim
> >>> can open compressed/tar.ed files on the fly), is there way to search
> >>> a keyword through all the files in the tarball?
> >>
> >> do you have zgrep available?  if so you can
> >>     zgrep 'pattern' tar-gz-file | vim -
> > 
> > I didn't know about zgrep! But how about setting 'grepprg' to use
> > it rather than grep? Then you can navigate results easier.

> Does it work for you with gzipped tar files?  I know you can use
> zgrep for plain (non-tar'ed) gzipped files, but when I try it on a
> gzipped tar file, it only tells me that a binary file matches:

>  ~$ cd tmp
>  ~/tmp$ mkdir d
>  ~/tmp$ cd d
>  ~/tmp/d$ echo alpha > a.txt
>  ~/tmp/d$ echo beta > b.txt
>  ~/tmp/d$ echo delta > d.txt
>  ~/tmp/d$ cd ..
>  ~/tmp$ tar cvfz d.tgz d/
>  d/
>  d/a.txt
>  d/d.txt
>  d/b.txt
>  ~/tmp$ zgrep alpha d.tgz
>  Binary file (standard input) matches

to be honest I don't know -- I learned about zgrep quite recently and
have never had occasion to use it -- I only briefly scanned the man
page before posting -- forgive me, I assumed it would handle tarfiles
too

maybe you'd need something like

    tar -xz tar-gz-file | grep 'pattern'

sc

-- 
You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist.
Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to.
For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php

Reply via email to