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A tool to automate regex-based refactorings across your codebase. Similar to codemod, but slightly more optimistic.

go get github.com/mi9/refactor

Usage

Assuming that $GOPATH/bin is in your $PATH:

refactor .ext 'regexp' 'replacement'

Apply s/regexp/replacement/g across all files in the current directory tree with extension .ext. Skip hidden files. Output each change applied as a color-coded patch, and allow the user to confirm all, confirm one, or abort.

regexp is parsed by the Go regexp package, so you can probably use any of the re2 syntax. For example, you can use $1-style placeholders to refer to capture groups, as long as you single-quote the replacement string so that your shell doesn't interpolate $1 as something else.

Why not use the power/elegance/flexibility/chainsaw of unix?

For example:

  • find . -name '$1' | xargs sed -i "" 's/$2/$3/g'

This is great, but I still want to see the first change to determine whether to back out. This doesn't give me confirmation.

  • grep -ERli --include "$1" "$2" . | xargs -o vim -c "argdo %s/$2/$3/gce | update" -c 'q'

This one allows me to 'apply all' or 'skip all' on a per-file basis, not across the project. Also with a large number of files it tends to make vim freak out and write swap files all over the place.

Running the tests

go test ./patch go test ./confirm

TODO

  • Prettier display of patch hunks

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Automate regex-based refactorings across your codebase

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