To answer "where did I also use this identifier?" -questions, I run on macOS and the linuxes
dired-maybe-insert-subdir
dired-mark-files-regexp
followed by either of:
dired-do-find-regexp
dired-do-find-regexp-and-replace
On Windows I can get by using Emacs as my IDE without Cygwin, except for dired recursive search/replace.
Does Projectile offer commands that will search/replace an identifier recursively without requiring Cygwin?
Does any other package make recursive search/replace possible on Windows without Cygwin?
I'm not concerned about the speed, because even after installing Cygwin, the recursive invocation of Cygwin's grep from within Emacs is painfully slow.
Update:
Recursive search/replace seems to be available in both Helm and Projectile.
If true, then my question is:
- Is the feature available on Windows without Cygwin?
- The list of
requires in my.emacsis already excessive. What is a light package that will do recursive search/replace (without Cygwin on Windows)?
Clarification:
OK. Success. [Thanks to Drew] With a .emacs containing nothing but (require 'dired+), I can search-and-replace in marked files using M-+ Q on Windows without having Cygwin installed. I'm guessing that this will also work on linux/macOS, although perhaps not quite as quickly as delegating to grep. (The "Act on ALL files [] in and UNDER this dir?" confirmation message will start to get tedious, but that's a separate question.)
For the present question one issue needs clarification. dired+ augments the built-in dired family of commands. Is there a way for it to take over ordinary dired-do-find-regexp-and-replace? That's because with the one-liner .emacs, and with a few marked files in a directory listing, I get
File not found - GREP
File not found - -I
...
File not found - NUL
File not found - ;
indicating that grep is still being invoked. How can tell dired+ "I'm on Windows and I won't install Cygwin; please take over A and Q?" (mapped by default dired-do-find-regexp and the aforementioned command).
Editorial: dired+ seems a bit overwhelming, but if it solves this one problem (eliminate the need for Cygwin on Windows), it will be well-worth figuring out how to move from the usual dired commands to dired+.