Finding a string in a file
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Hello,
I need help with this problem:
How can I find the files with the same name in different folders that have the number "5800" in them? Furthermore, how can I list these files/folders and which line(s) the number "5800" appear in the files?
I would really appreciate the help.
Thanks.
2 comentarios
Fangjun Jiang
el 22 de Jul. de 2011
"5800" is in the folder name or in the file name? Is the file a ASCII text file?
Respuestas (8)
Walter Roberson
el 23 de Jul. de 2011
CommonFileName = 'x3175.txt'; %or whatever the common name is
folderinfo = dir('*');
folderinfo(~[folderinfo.isdir]) = [];
folderinfo(strcmp({folderinfo.name},{'.','..'})) = [];
for FoIdx = 1 : length(folderinfo)
specificname = fullfile(folderinfo(FoIdx}.name, CommonFileName);
if exists(specificname, 'file)
%at this point, insert your code to examine specificfile
end
end
0 comentarios
Jason Ross
el 21 de Sept. de 2012
I realize this question is old, but in Windows Explorer (and not strictly a MATLAB question, either), you can put "content: " in the search box in the upper right hand corner, and it will search the files (including .doc files) for the string. So for this question, putting "content: 5800" would have searched and returned a list of the files that had "5800" in it.
Also, note that you can try finding something in Explorer, and then at the bottom it says "Search again in:", and one of the choices is "content". Not the most usable thing (the search dog in previous Windows versions exposed this more quickly), but it is there.
There is also a "find" command you can run from the Command Shell, just cd to the directory in question and type
find "5800" *
And the current directory will be searched. I checked a directory where I had some Word documents and it successfully searched them.
0 comentarios
Honglei Chen
el 22 de Jul. de 2011
Hi osminbas,
You could write a script to achieve this. You can use cd to change directories, what to list all the files in the folder, then for each file, use textscan to read each line and strfind to find '5800'. You then just write the result to either the screen or a file.
HTH
Honglei
0 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 23 de Jul. de 2011
On unix systems:
!grep -Hn 5800 */TheFileName.txt
0 comentarios
Fangjun Jiang
el 23 de Jul. de 2011
How about this? Open M-Editor, select menu Edit->Find file. Specify what text to find, in what files and what folder/sub-folder to find, the result will show all the files, folders and the lines that the text appears in.
Many other IDEs probably have the same capability too.
0 comentarios
osminbas
el 25 de Jul. de 2011
6 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 28 de Jul. de 2011
The line "if exists(specificname, 'file)" that I put in the code checks to see whether the file exists in the subdirectory you are processing, and skips the string search if the file is not there.
For searching within a specific file, there are many ways. One way is:
fid = fopen(specificfile, 'rt');
lines = textscan(fid,'%[^\n]'); %reads line by line
fclose(fid);
L = find(~cellfun(@isempty,strfind(lines, '5800')),1,'first');
if ~isempty(L)
fprintf('found in %s at line %d\n', specificfile, L);
end
venkat vasu
el 22 de Sept. de 2012
Editada: Walter Roberson
el 22 de Sept. de 2012
a1=dir;
l=length(a1);
for i1=3:l
files=dir(a1(i1).name);
nfiles = length(files);
for i=3:nfiles
currentfilename = files(i).name;
if currentfilename==5800
%whatever operation
end
end
end
this code surely will help you...
1 comentario
Walter Roberson
el 22 de Sept. de 2012
The task was to search the content, not the file name.
Also, "currentfilename" from files(i).name will be a string, but you attempt to compare the string to the numeric value 5800 . That is not going to have the result you expect.
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