
I looked at both, and I have encoding issues with both.
My locale is fr_FR.utf8
For instance, with HSH:
I have a 'bar' directory, containing a file 'fooé'
run $ "find bar" :: IO [String]
returns me : ["bar", "bar/foo*\233*"]
and run $ "find bar -name fooé"
returns []
When I provoke an error by running:
run $ "find fooé"
it says :
find: "foo*\351*": No file or directory
So it is not the same encoding!
2010/8/22 Yves Parès
Thanks for the HSH link, Magnus.
Concerning FileManip, it seems that I can't perform easily a case-insensitive search (for instance with find, you just use -iname instead of -name). Am I wrong?
2010/8/22 Magnus Therning
On 22/08/10 16:32, Yves Parès wrote:
Hello,
I would like to recode in Haskell a piece of bash program that uses find. The advantage of find is that it is quite easy to use and fast. Is there a package that let us access to find-like functionnalities, with similar performances? Or at least some C functions that could be used through the FFI? (I would like to avoid to recur through directories and match files myself, I tried it and the search lasts for ages).
Take a look at HSH on hackage. I've used that many times to inject some sanity into stuff that I used to do with bash.
/M
-- Magnus Therning (OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4) magnus@therning.org Jabber: magnus@therning.org http://therning.org/magnus identi.ca|twitter: magthe
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