The eprintln! macro was added to Rust's standard library in Rust 1.19.0,
which is below ripgrep's minimum Rust version. Therefore, we can rely on
the standard library variant now.
This commit adds opt-in support for searching compressed files during
recursive search. This behavior is only enabled when the
`-z/--search-zip` flag is passed to ripgrep. When enabled, a limited set
of common compression formats are recognized via file extension, and a
new process is spawned to perform the decompression. ripgrep then
searches the stdout of that spawned process.
Closes#539
This commit adds 256-color and 24-bit truecolor support to ripgrep.
This only provides output support on ANSI terminals. If the Windows
console is used for coloring, then 256-color and 24-bit color settings
are ignored.
The --passthru flag causes ripgrep to print every line,
even if the line does not contain a match. This is a
response to the common pattern of `^|foo` to match every
line, while still highlighting things like `foo`.
Fixes#740
* Don't use 'smart typography' when generating man page
* Document PATTERN and PATH
* Capitalise place-holder names consistently
* Add note about PATH overriding glob/ignore rules
* Update args.rs for new PATH capitalisation
Fixes#725
The regex update fixes the Rust nightly build failure by in turn updating
its simd dependency to 2.x.
The regex update also includes a literal optimization that uses Tuned
Boyer Moore.
Fixes#617
clippy: fix a few lints
The fixes are:
* Use single quotes for single-character
* Use ticks in documentation when necessary.
* Just bow to clippy's wisdom.
Fixes#717 (partially)
The previous implementation of the smart-case feature was actually *too* smart,
in that it inspected the final character ranges in the AST to determine if the
pattern contained upper-case characters. This meant that patterns like `foo\w`
would not be handled case-insensitively, since `\w` includes the range of
upper-case characters A–Z.
As a medium-term solution to this problem, we now inspect the input pattern
itself for upper-case characters, ignoring any that immediately follow a `\`.
This neatly handles all of the most basic cases like `\w`, `\S`, and `É`, though
it still has problems with more complex features like `\p{Ll}`. Handling those
correctly will require improvements to the AST.