It is not a question of searching and replacing strings in one file, but
searching for a document or a set of documents among tenth of document or
even more, possibly in various format.
Roland.
briangpowell . writes:
> Emacs (shortened name from "Editor Macros") has the fastest Regular
> Expressi
Emacs (shortened name from "Editor Macros") has the fastest Regular
Expression engine in the world--when you compare the engines that are
programmed to find and display character strings AS YOU TYPE THEM.
So, just hoping you keep that in mind: As far as editing documents and
searching documents an
To further explain my setup, I have three libraries of files Personal, Technical
and Business. Personal is all personal data including Org files, Technical is
all whitepapers and vendor documentation, and Business is Org projects and other
matters. Recoll is used to search all of them.
In my shell
I had a quick look at the recoll and I notice that there is a python API
to update/create index.
Maybe something could be developped using the python package recently
released by Karl Voit, to feed a recoll index with org data.
Roland.
Roland Everaert writes:
> Good to know, I will have a look
Good to know, I will have a look at it when time permit.
Russell Adams writes:
> Recoll is xaipan based.
>
> On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 08:28:22AM -0500, John Kitchin wrote:
>> It could be dead. At the time I worked with it, the project had already
>> switched to a library form that was not directly
Recoll is xaipan based.
On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 08:28:22AM -0500, John Kitchin wrote:
> It could be dead. At the time I worked with it, the project had already
> switched to a library form that was not directly useful to me, and the
> original swish project was not being further developed. These d
It could be dead. At the time I worked with it, the project had already
switched to a library form that was not directly useful to me, and the
original swish project was not being further developed. These days, I would
look to something like xapian or postgresql I think (assuming sqlite is not
suff
Is it me or Swish-e is dead?
The url www.swish-e.org, leads to a whisky e-shop oO.
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> John Kitchin writes:
>
>> The way I got Swish to index org files was to create a script that
>> generated an xml file
>> (https://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/06/Indexing-headl
John Kitchin writes:
> The way I got Swish to index org files was to create a script that
> generated an xml file
> (https://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/06/Indexing-headlines-in-org-files-with-swish-e-with-laser-sharp-results/)
> or html
> (http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> I think this last point is key. Most full-text search engines provide
> config options for defining fields, or "facets", which in theory we
> could set up to parse tags/properties/timestamps.
Of course it's an Emacs-based tool, but please note that org-ql has
extensive,
The way I got Swish to index org files was to create a script that
generated an xml file
(https://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/06/Indexing-headlines-in-org-files-with-swish-e-with-laser-sharp-results/)
or html
(http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/03/Using-swish-e-to-index-org
Roland Everaert writes:
> Hello all,
>
> I am interested in a search/indexing engine targeting the org format,
> too.
>
> My interest comes from the fact that I have a growing number of org
> files and as org-mode has no file archiving feature, AFAIK, searching
> needs more and more time to compl
I use Recoll. It has a GUI, a CLI, and I use a script with dialog to popup
results.
I index all my org files, all my PDFs (vendor technical documentation), email,
etc.
Works great, refreshes daily.
On Wed, Nov 06, 2019 at 05:02:07PM +0100, Roland Everaert wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I am interested
Hello all,
I am interested in a search/indexing engine targeting the org format,
too.
My interest comes from the fact that I have a growing number of org
files and as org-mode has no file archiving feature, AFAIK, searching
needs more and more time to complete.
Moving files, that are no more nec
On Wednesday, 30 Oct 2019 at 23:17, Jean Louis wrote:
> Me using `M-x grep'
+1
I frequently do
find ~ -name '*.org'| xargs grep -l
to search all my org files for (and using variants of grep like
egrep for full regex). Have never found the need for more than this
(for my uses). YM
I wrote https://github.com/jkitchin/scimax/blob/master/org-db.el to use
sqlite for this. It does not do full text search, I found that too slow
with my files and sqlite.
you might see https://github.com/emacs-helm/helm-recoll.
I have some blog posts with similar ideas:
https://kitchingroup.cheme.
* Nathan Neff [2019-10-30 23:08]:
> Hello all,
>
> I'm considering indexing my org-mode files and haven't done any research
> into
> this. I'm sure there's 100 different ways to do this but wanted to ask the
> list if anyone
> is indexing their org-mode files and using a search tool like Solr, E
Hello all,
I'm considering "indexing" my org-mode files and haven't done any research
into
this. I'm sure there's 100 different ways to do this but wanted to ask the
list if anyone
is indexing their org-mode files and using a search tool like Solr, Elastic
or smaller indexing engines to search th
18 matches
Mail list logo