readtags¶
Find tag file entries matching specified names
- Version
5.9.0
- Manual group
Universal Ctags
- Manual section
1
SYNOPSIS¶
DESCRIPTION¶
The readtags program filters, sorts and prints tag entries in a tags file. The basic filtering is done using actions, by which you can list all regular tags, pseudo tags or regular tags matching specific name. Then, further filtering and sorting can be done using post processors, namely filter expressions and sorter expressions.
ACTIONS¶
-l
,--list
List regular tags.
[-] NAME
List regular tags matching NAME. “-” as NAME indicates arguments after this as NAME even if they start with -.
-D
,--list-pseudo-tags
Equivalent to
--list-pseudo-tags
.
OPTIONS¶
Controlling the Tags Reading Behavior¶
The behavior of reading tags can be controlled using these options:
-t TAGFILE
,--tag-file TAGFILE
Use specified tag file (default: “tags”).
-s[0|1|2]
,--override-sort-detection METHOD
Override sort detection of tag file. METHOD: unsorted|sorted|foldcase
The NAME action will perform binary search on sorted (including “foldcase”) tags files, which is much faster then on unsorted tags files.
Controlling the NAME Action Behavior¶
The behavior of the NAME action can be controlled using these options:
-i
,--icase-match
Perform case-insensitive matching in the NAME action.
-p
,--prefix-match
Perform prefix matching in the NAME action.
Controlling the Output¶
By default, the output of readtags contains only the name, input and pattern field. The Output can be tweaked using these options:
-d
,--debug
Turn on debugging output.
-E
,--escape-output
Escape characters like tabs in output as described in tags(5).
-e
,--extension-fields
Include extension fields in output.
-n
,--line-number
Also include the line number field when
-e
option is give.
About the -E
option: certain characters are escaped in a tags file, to make
it machine-readable. e.g., ensuring no tabs character appear in fields other
than the pattern field. By default, readtags translates them to make it
human-readable, but when utilizing readtags output in a script or a client
tool, -E
option should be used. See ctags-client-tools(7) for more
discussion on this.
Filtering and Sorting¶
Further filtering and sorting on the tags listed by actions are performed using:
-Q EXP
,--filter EXP
Filter the tags listed by ACTION with EXP before printing.
-S EXP
,--sorter EXP
Sort the tags listed by ACTION with EXP before printing.
These are discussed in the EXPRESSION section.
Examples¶
List all tags in “/path/to/tags”:
$ readtags -t /path/to/tags -l
List all tags in “tags” that start with “mymethod”:
$ readtags -p - mymethod
List all tags matching “mymethod”, case insensitively:
$ readtags -i - mymethod
List all tags start with “myvar”, and printing all fields (i.e., the whole line):
$ readtags -p -ne - myvar
EXPRESSION¶
Scheme-style expressions are used for the -Q
and -S
options. For those
who doesn’t know Scheme or Lisp, just remember:
A function call is wrapped in a pair of parenthesis. The first item in it is the function/operator name, the others are arguments.
Function calls can be nested.
Missing values and boolean false are represented by
#f
.#t
and all other values are considered to be true.
So, (+ 1 (+ 2 3))
means add 2 and 3 first, then add the result with 1.
(and "string" 1 #t)
means logical AND on "string"
, 1
and #t
,
and the result is true since there is no #f
.
Filtering¶
The tag entries that make the filter expression produces true value are printed by readtags.
The basic operators for filtering are eq?
, prefix?
, suffix?
,
substr?
, and #/PATTERN/
. Language common fields can be accessed using
variables starting with $
, e.g., $language
represents the language field.
For example:
List all tags start with “myfunc” in Python code files:
$ readtags -p -Q '(eq? $language "Python")' - myfunc
downcase
or upcase
operators can be used to perform case-insensitive
matching:
List all tags containing “my”, case insensitively:
$ readtags -Q '(substr? (downcase $name) "my")' -l
We have logical operators like and
, or
and not
. The value of a
missing field is #f, so we could deal with missing fields:
List all tags containing “impl” in Python code files, but allow the
language:
field to be missing:$ readtags -Q '(and (substr? $name "impl")\ (or (not $language)\ (eq? $language "Python")))' -l
#/PATTERN/
is for the case when string predicates (prefix?
, suffix?
,
and substr?
) are not enough. You can use “Posix extended regular expression”
as PATTERN.
List all tags inherits from the class “A”:
$ readtags -Q '(#/(^|,) ?A(,|$)/ $inherits)' -l
Here $inherits
is a comma-separated class list like “A,B,C”, “P, A, Q”, or
just “A”. Notice that this filter works on both situations where there’s a
space after each comma or there’s not.
Case-insensitive matching can be performed by #/PATTERN/i
:
List all tags inherits from the class “A” or “a”:
$ readtags -Q '(#/(^|,) ?A(,|$)/i $inherits)' -l
To include “/” in a pattern, prefix \
to the “/”.
NOTE: The above regular expression pattern for inspecting inheritances is just
an example to show how to use #/PATTERN/
expression. Tags file generators
have no consensus about the format of inherits:
, e.g., whether there should
be a space after a comma. Even parsers in ctags have no consensus. Noticing the
format of the inherits:
field of specific languages is needed for such
queries.
The expressions #/PATTERN/
and #/PATTERN/i
are for interactive use.
Readtags also offers an alias string->regexp
, so #/PATTERN/
is equal to
(string->regexp "PATTERN")
, and #/PATTERN/i
is equal to
(string->regexp "PATTERN" :case-fold #t)
. string->regexp
doesn’t need
to prefix \
for including “/” in a pattern. string->regexp
may simplify
a client tool building an expression. See also ctags-client-tools(7) for
building expressions in your tool.
Let’s now consider missing fields. The tags file may have tag entries that has
no inherits:
field. In that case $inherits
is #f, and the regular
expression matching raises an error, since string operators only work for
strings. To avoid this problem:
Safely list all tags inherits from the class “A”:
$ readtags -Q '(and $inherits (#/(^|,) ?A(,|$)/ $inherits))' -l
This makes sure $inherits
is not missing first, then match it by regexp.
Sometimes you want to keep tags where the field is missing. For example, your
want to exclude reference tags, which is marked by the extras:
field, then
you want to keep tags who doesn’t have extras:
field since they are also
not reference tags. Here’s how to do it:
List all tags but the reference tags:
$ readtags -Q '(or (not $extras) (#/(^|,) ?reference(,|$)/ $extras))' -l
Notice that (not $extras)
produces #t
when $extras
is missing, so
the whole or
expression produces #t
.
Run “readtags -H filter” to know about all valid functions and variables.
Sorting¶
When sorting, the sorter expression is evaluated on two tag entries to decide which should sort before the other one, until the order of all tag entries is decided.
In a sorter expression, $
and &
are used to access the fields in the
two tag entries, and let’s call them $-entry and &-entry. The sorter expression
should have a value of -1, 0 or 1. The value -1 means the $-entry should be put
above the &-entry, 1 means the contrary, and 0 makes their order in the output
uncertain.
The core operator of sorting is <>
. It’s used to compare two strings or two
numbers (numbers are for the line:
or end:
fields). In (<> a b)
, if
a
< b
, the result is -1; a
> b
produces 1, and a
= b
produces 0. Strings are compared using the strcmp
function, see strcmp(3).
For example, sort by names, and make those shorter or alphabetically smaller ones appear before the others:
$ readtags -S '(<> $name &name)' -l
This reads “If the tag name in the $-entry is smaller, it goes before the &-entry”.
The <or>
operator is used to chain multiple expressions until one returns
-1 or 1. For example, sort by input file names, then line numbers if in the
same file:
$ readtags -S '(<or> (<> $input &input) (<> $line &line))' -l
The *-
operator is used to flip the compare result. i.e., (*- (<> a b))
is the same as (<> b a)
.
Filter expressions can be used in sorter expressions. The technique is use
if
to produce integers that can be compared based on the filter, like:
(<> (if filter-expr-on-$-entry -1 1)
(if filter-expr-on-&-entry -1 1))
So if $-entry satisfies the filter, while &-entry doesn’t, it’s the same as
(<> -1 1)
, which produces -1
.
For example, we want to put tags with “file” kind below other tags, then the sorter would look like:
(<> (if (eq? $kind "file") 1 -1)
(if (eq? &kind "file") 1 -1))
A quick read tells us: If $-entry has “file” kind, and &-entry doesn’t, the
sorter becomes (<> 1 -1)
, which produces 1
, so the $-entry is put below
the &-entry, exactly what we want.
Inspecting the Behavior of Expressions¶
The print operator can be used to print the value of an expression. For example:
$ readtags -Q '(print $name)' -l
prints the name of each tag entry before it. Since the return value of
print
is not #f, all the tag entries are printed. We could control this
using the begin
or begin0
operator. begin
returns the value of its
last argument, and begin0
returns the value of its first argument. For
example:
$ readtags -Q '(begin0 #f (print (prefix? "ctags" "ct")))' -l
prints a bunch of “#t” (depending on how many lines are in the tags file), and the actual tag entries are not printed.
SEE ALSO¶
See tags(5) for the details of tags file format.
See ctags-client-tools(7) for the tips writing a tool utilizing tags file.
The official Universal Ctags web site at:
The git repository for the library used in readtags command:
CREDITS¶
Universal Ctags project https://ctags.io/
Darren Hiebert <dhiebert@users.sourceforge.net> http://DarrenHiebert.com/
The readtags command and libreadtags maintained at Universal Ctags are derived from readtags.c and readtags.h developd at http://ctags.sourceforge.net.