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fxr

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fxr (pronounced "fixer") is a CLI utility that can be used to find matching patterns in text files and:

  • append/prepend lines
  • delete lines before/after the matching line.
  • replace text

In other words, you can consider it as a replacement for ag, xargs and sed (with a nicer API!)

Warning: *fxr currently has no dry-run mode and by default changes files inplace. If you want backups, you need to explicitly enable them!

Installation

Prerequisites

All you need is Python 3.6+ and a search program like ag:

pipx

The recommended installation method is pipx. More specifically, you can install fxr for your user with:

pipx install fxr

The above command will create a virtual environment in ~/.local/pipx/venvs/fxr and add the fxr script in ~/.local/bin.

pip

Alternatively you can use good old pip but this is more fragile than pipx.

pip install --user fxr

Modes of operation

fxr has three modes of operations:

  • fxr add
  • fxr delete
  • fxr replace

fxr add

In this mode you search for lines matching <pattern> and you append/prepend text to them.

fxr add <pattern> <added_text>              # Appends text to lines matching pattern
fxr add --prepend <pattern> <added_text>    # Prepends text to lines matching pattern

fxr delete

In this mode you search for lines matching <pattern> and you can:

  1. delete N lines preceding the matching line
  2. delete M lines following the matching line
  3. delete the matching line itself
  4. or any combination of the above!

E.g. to delete 3 lines before the line matching pattern, 2 lines after it and the matching line itself:

fxr delete --before 3 --after 2 --include_line <pattern>

fxr replace

In this mode you can replace text on a single line. This is more or less equivalent to:

ag <pattern> -l | xargs sed -i 's/<pattern>/<replacement>/g'

You can use it like this:

fxr replace <pattern> <replacement>

Common interface

All the above subcommands share the following flags/arguments:

  • --backup: The provided value is used as a prefix for the backup files. If it is not provided, the changes are being done in-place.
  • --literal: When you set this flag, the pattern will not be parsed as a regex.
  • --raise-if-no-change: When you set this flag, an exception will be raised if there were no changes in the file.
  • --single <filename>: When you specify this argument, fxr will only try to do its magic on the specified file. I.e. ag will not be used.
  • --search_prog: If you don't like ag you can specify an alternate program (e.g. rg).
  • --search_args: You can specify additional arguments for the search program.

Notes

Rationale

There were two compelling arguments that made me write this:

  1. sed regex engine is quite limited. E.g. there is no support for look-aheads and other more advanced features, which you don't really need, until you need them! (link).

  2. The API for combining ag, sed and xargs is clunky at best (e.g. repeating <pattern> both in ag and sed etc). E.g.: ag <pattern> -l | xargs sed -i 's/<pattern>/<replacement>/g'

Performance

The script has not been written with performance in mind. Since the search for matching files is being done using ag, performance shouldn't be too bad, but keep in mind that the main use case is to make changes to source code and configuration files; not a multi-GB CSV file/database dump.

Search programs

If you wish to use a different program than ag you can do so by using the appropriate CLI argument.