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- <html>
- <head>
- <title>Treesed Usage</title>
- </head>
- <body>
- <table border="0" width="660" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
- <tbody><tr valign="top"><td width="165">
-
- <h3>How to Use Treesed</h3>
-
- Go to the directory where you want to search or make changes.
-
- <p>
- There are two choices you can make when using treesed:
- </p><ol>
- <li>Do I just want to search for a text, or do I want to search for a
- text and replace it with something else?
- <br>
- If you are just searching you are using Treesed in "search mode", otherwise it is in
- "replace mode."
- </li><li>Do I want to search/replace only in files in my current directory,
- or should files in all subdirectories (and all directories below that)
- also be done?
- </li></ol>
- Some examples will make this clear.
-
- <h4>Searching</h4>
- Say you are faced with the situation that the author of a slew of web-pages, Nathan Brazil, has left and has been succeeded by Mavra Chang. First, let us see which files are affected by this (what you type in is shown in <b><tt>bold</tt></b>):
- <blockquote>
- <pre>[localhost] <b>treesed "Nathan Brazil" -files *.html</b>
- search_pattern: Nathan\ Brazil
- replacement_pattern:
-
- ** Search mode
-
- .
- midnight.html: 1 lines on: 2
- ..
- well.html: 1 lines on: 3
- </pre>
- </blockquote>
- We notice the following:
- <ul>
- <li>The search text <tt>"Nathan Brazil"</tt> is enclosed in
- double-quotes (<tt>"</tt>).
- </li><li>You specify which files to search with <tt>-files</tt> followed by a
- list of file names--in this case <tt>*.html</tt>.
- </li><li>Treesed reports the search pattern ("pattern" is just a fancy word
- for "text") you specified (you can ignore
- that \).
- </li><li>Treesed reports an empty <tt>replacement_pattern</tt>. This is
- correct, because you haven't entered one.
- </li><li>It therefore deduces that is is in search mode.
- </li><li>It finds two files containing "Nathan Brazil", and reports on which
- lines of these files it found it; it does not show the lines themselves.
- </li></ul>
- Because you used <tt>-files</tt>, Treesed will search in the files you
- specify <i>in the current directory</i>. You can also search files in
- the current directory <i>and</i> all directories below it. However, in
- that case you can not specify which file names to use, all files will be
- searched:
- <blockquote>
- <pre>[localhost] <b>treesed "Nathan Brazil" -tree</b>
- search_pattern: Nathan\ Brazil
- replacement_pattern:
-
- ** Search mode
-
- .
- midnight.html: 1 lines on: 2
- ...
- well.html: 1 lines on: 3
- .
- new/echoes.html: 1 lines on: 2
- </pre>
- </blockquote>
- We notice the following:
- <ul>
- <li>Instead of <tt>-files</tt> we now see <tt>-tree</tt>.
- </li><li>We do not see a specification of file names.
- </li><li>Treesed finds an occurence of "Nathan Brazil" in the file
- <tt>echoes.html</tt> in the subdirectory <tt>new</tt>; it did not
- find this file in the previous example (as it shouldn't).
- </li></ul>
-
- <h4>Replacing</h4>
- To replace a text you simply add the replacement text right after the
- search text:
- <blockquote>
- <pre>[localhost] <b>treesed "Nathan Brazil" "Mavra Change" -files *.html</b>
- search_pattern: Nathan\ Brazil
- replacement_pattern: Mavra Chang
-
- ** EDIT MODE!
-
- .
- midnight.html: 1 lines on: 2
-
- Replaced Nathan\ Brazil by Mavra Chang on 1 lines in midnight.html
- ..
- well.html: 1 lines on: 3
-
- Replaced Nathan\ Brazil by Mavra Chang on 1 lines in well.html
- </pre>
- </blockquote>
- We notice the following:
- <ul>
- <li>Right after the search text "Nathan Brazil" you specify the
- replacement text "Mavra Chang".
- </li><li>As a result, Treesed now reports a non-empty
- <tt>replacement_pattern</tt>.
- </li><li>Hence it concludes it is in "edit mode", which means replacment mode.
- </li><li>Treesed dutifully reports on which lines in which files it did the
- replacement.
- </li></ul>
- To replace a text in all files in the current directory and the ones
- below it, we do the following:
- <blockquote>
- <pre>[localhost] <b>treesed "Nathan Brazil" "Mavra Chang" -tree</b>
- search_pattern: Nathan\ Brazil
- replacement_pattern: Mavra Chang
-
- ** EDIT MODE!
-
- .
- midnight.html: 1 lines on: 2
-
- Replaced Nathan\ Brazil by Mavra Chang on 1 lines in midnight.html
-
- ....
- well.html: 1 lines on: 3
-
- Replaced Nathan\ Brazil by Mavra Chang on 1 lines in well.html
- .
- new/echoes.html: 1 lines on: 2
-
- Replaced Nathan\ Brazil by Mavra Chang on 1 lines in new/echoes.html
- </pre>
- </blockquote>
- and we get the expected results, including the replace in
- <tt>new/echoes.html</tt>.
-
- <h4>Old Versions</h4>
- Treesed leaves behind quite a mess of old versions of the files it
- changed (only in change-mode, of course). These old files have the same
- name as the original file, with <tt>.ddddd</tt> appended to it. For
- example, if treesed makes a change to <tt>midnight.html</tt> it will
- leave the original version as something like
- <tt>midnight.html.26299</tt>. You'll have to remove these files lest
- your disk area clutters up. Here is a command that does that, <b>but
- beware!</b> This command removes all files in the current directory and
- all below it, that end in a period followed by one or more
- digits:
- <blockquote>
- <pre>find . -name "*.[0-9]*" -exec rm {} \;
- </pre>
- </blockquote>
-
- It is interesting to note that if you use treesed again without cleaning
- up, you may get files like <tt>midnight.html.26299.27654</tt>. These
- will also be cleaned up by the above slightly dangerous command.
-
-
- <h3>About Treesed</h3>
- <tt>treesed</tt> is public domain software developed
- and designed by Rick Jansen from Sara, Amsterdam, Netherlands, January
- 1996.
-
- <p>
-
- <h3>About This Document</h3>
- This usage document was created by the Division of Information Technology Services at The
- University of Western Ontario.
-
- </body></html>
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