Command line tool that interacts with file and command line input/output to practice some of the Rust concepts we've learned so far.
Rust's speed, safety, single binary output, and cross-platform support make it an ideal language for creating command line tools, so for our project, we'll make our own version of the classic command line search tool grep
(globally search a regular expression and print).
grep
takes as its arguments a file path and a string. Then it reads the file, finds lines in that file that contain the string argument, and prints only those lines (containing the string).
We'll call our project minigrep
to distinguish it from the grep
tool that you might already have on your system.
The first task is to make minigrep accept its two command line arguments: the file path and a string to search for.
cargo test
It searches for the string "the"
in the file poem.txt
and prints all the lines that included the string to the terminal:
cargo run -- "the" "poem.txt"
# or
IGNORE_CASE="false" cargo run -- "the" "poem.txt"
By default IGNORE_CASE
is false
and the search is case-sensitive.
similar to:
grep "the" "poem.txt"
IGNORE_CASE="true" cargo run -- "the" "poem.txt"
similar to:
grep -i "the" "poem.txt"