Find¶
The find
command lets you easily search for one of your projects (even if you can't exactly remember it's name 🤔).
Help¶
$ pytoil find --help
Usage: pytoil find [OPTIONS] PROJECT
Quickly locate a project.
The find command provides a fuzzy search for finding a project when you
don't know where it is (local or on GitHub).
It will perform a fuzzy search through all your local and remote projects,
bring back the best matches and show you where they are.
Useful if you have a lot of projects and you can't quite remember what the
one you want is called!
The "-l/--limit" flag can be used to alter the number of returned search
results, but bare in mind that matches with sufficient match score are
returned anyway so the results flag only limits the maximum number of
results shown.
Examples:
$ pytoil find my
$ pytoil find proj --limit 5
Options:
-l, --limit INTEGER Limit results to maximum number. [default: 5]
--help Show this message and exit.
Searching for Projects¶
// I swear it was called python... something
$ pytoil find python
Project Similarity Where
───────────────────────────────────────
py 90 Remote
python-launcher 90 Remote
What pytoil does here is it takes the argument you give it, fetches all your projects and does a fuzzy text match against all of them, wittles down the best matches and shows them to you (along with whether they are available locally or on GitHub).
Isn't that useful! 🎉
Info
Under the hood, pytoil uses the excellent thefuzz library to do this, which implements the Levenshtein distance algorithm to find the best matches 🚀
404 - Project Not Found¶
If find
can't find a match in any of your projects, you'll get a helpful warning...
// Something that won't match
$ pytoil find dingledangledongle
âš No matches found!