A simple program to organize plain text files with tags.
Just run cargo install tag
to install tag
for your system.
Run paru -S tag
to install tag
with the AUR.
Simply head to the releases page and download the latest release for your system.
To use tag you must add a taglist as the first line of your text files. A tagline looks like the following:
tags: [#tag1 #tag2]
The tags in the tagline start with a #
followed by letters (some none-ASCII letters are also supported), numbers, _
and -
. This tagline must be the first line of your file and must not be larger than one line. You can find the tagline grammar under tagline.pest.
Once you've added taglines to your local files you can run tag
. tag
will search all subdirectories of a given directory and check if tagged files match your search query.
The tag
help message:
Search for local text files with a simple tagging system.
Usage: tag [OPTIONS] <PATH> [QUERY]
Arguments:
<PATH> The path that will be searched
[QUERY] Search query for the tags
Options:
-s, --silent
Only print the paths of matched files
-c, --command <COMMAND>
A command that will be executed on matched files
-f, --filter-command <FILTER_COMMAND>
A command that must run successfully for a file to be accepted
-n, --no-color
Disable coloring
-q, --query-stdin
Receive a query from the standard input
-i, --inspect
Enter an interactive inspection mode to view each file individually
-h, --help
Print help
-V, --version
Print version
A query contains operators and tags. Usable operators are &
for the logical AND, |
for the logical OR and !
as a unary NOT. Furthermore, you can nest queries by using parantheses. A query could look like this:
#tag1 & #tag2 | (!#tag3 & #tag4)
This query would match all files that contain #tag1
AND #tag2
OR files that don't contain #tag3
while also containing #tag4
. You can find the query grammar under query.pest.
tag
supports two flags that execute a system command. The -c
/--command
flag lets you add a command that should be executed on each matched file. The -f
/--filter-command
flag checks if an executed system command exits successfully. If not, the found file will not match, even tho it contains tags matching the query. You can use the string #FILE#
in your command. This string will be replaced with the filepath of the file that matched the query. For example, the command
tag . "#asdf" -f "grep 'something' #FILE#" -c "echo 'somethingelse' >> #FILE#"
Will only match the files tagged with #asdf
that also include the string "something". The string "somethingelse" will then be appended to each found file.
You can use the inspect mode using -i
/--inspect
. In this mode, the content of each file as well as the output of your -c
command and found tags will be displayed. Keybindings are displayed at the bottom of the screen.
Furthermore, inspect mode supports executing further commands on your files. Those commands are formatted the same way as a command on a file or a filter command.