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Hello! Absolutely great tool @mdolidon
I was hoping for a feature request, which I will gladly make a small condation for.
Lets be honest, most of us use this on Linux to find those pesky Windows CR-LF.
When I try and find files in verbose mode, it prints all the "LF" files, and theres a lot of them. I am really only looking for problematic CR-LF files.
So I was hoping for a less-verbose mode, that would only print
- No line ending
- Windows (CR-LF)
- Mixed endings
And NOT print - Unix (LF)
An example output would be (what Im currently doing): grep -rIl -m 1 $'\r' which only finds the problematic files.
For more configuration, a toggle could be provided to choose between verbose (all) or verbose (some) and somehow choose which few line endings to scan for.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Hello! Absolutely great tool @mdolidon
I was hoping for a feature request, which I will gladly make a small condation for.
Lets be honest, most of us use this on Linux to find those pesky Windows CR-LF.
When I try and find files in verbose mode, it prints all the "LF" files, and theres a lot of them. I am really only looking for problematic CR-LF files.
So I was hoping for a less-verbose mode, that would only print
And NOT print
- Unix (LF)
An example output would be (what Im currently doing):
grep -rIl -m 1 $'\r'
which only finds the problematic files.For more configuration, a toggle could be provided to choose between verbose (all) or verbose (some) and somehow choose which few line endings to scan for.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: