Hi,
I want to creating a tags file but I have trouble of understanding the manual.
According to the manual, to create a tags file, I have to domething similar to:
geany -g [-P] <Tag File> <File list>
Now I want to create a tags file for all my *.php files recursively in /path/to/application/root, so with a lot of other directories under it.
In linux, I would do something like:
$> geany -g $(find . -type f -name '*.php')
*But I have no idea how to do this in windows on the command line.*
So how can I create a tags file in windows for Geany?
And when I created one, where should I put it?
Regards, Eddy
On 12-12-17 11:09 AM, Eddy wrote:
Hi,
I want to creating a tags file but I have trouble of understanding the manual.
According to the manual, to create a tags file, I have to domething similar to:
geany -g [-P] <Tag File> <File list>
Now I want to create a tags file for all my *.php files recursively in /path/to/application/root, so with a lot of other directories under it.
In linux, I would do something like:
$> geany -g $(find . -type f -name '*.php')
*But I have no idea how to do this in windows on the command line.*
You could still use find[1] (or the one from MSYS or Cygwin) or hack together a little PHP script that collects the filenames recursively and calls a Geany subprocess appropriately with the collected filenames. Alternatively, you could generate the tags file in Linux and just copy it into Windows.
So how can I create a tags file in windows for Geany?
And when I created one, where should I put it?
It depends on the Windows version, it seems like they shuffle %HOME% stuff around every version, but IIRC the manual has the directories for recent Windows versions.
Cheers, Matthew Brush