Just out of curiosity I've glanced into Microsoft.Extensions.FileSystemGlobbing - and it was dragging quite huge dependencies on quite many libraries - I've decided why I cannot try to write something similar?
Well - easy to say than done, I've quickly noticed that it was not so trivial function after all - for example "*.txt" should match for files only in current directly, while "**.txt" should also harvest sub folders.
Microsoft also tests some odd matching pattern sequences like "./*.txt" - I'm not sure who actually needs "./" kind of string - since they are removed anyway while processing.
(https://github.com/aspnet/FileSystem/blob/dev/test/Microsoft.Extensions.FileSystemGlobbing.Tests/PatternMatchingTests.cs)
Anyway, I've coded my own function - and there will be two copies of it - one in svn (I might bugfix it later on) - and I'll copy one sample here as well for demo purposes. I recommend to copy paste from svn link.
SVN Link:
https://sourceforge.net/p/syncproj/code/HEAD/tree/SolutionProjectBuilder.cs#l800
(Search for matchFiles function if not jumped correctly).
And here is also local function copy:
/// <summary>
/// Matches files from folder _dir using glob file pattern.
/// In glob file pattern matching * reflects to any file or folder name, ** refers to any path (including sub-folders).
/// ? refers to any character.
///
/// There exists also 3-rd party library for performing similar matching - 'Microsoft.Extensions.FileSystemGlobbing'
/// but it was dragging a lot of dependencies, I've decided to survive without it.
/// </summary>
/// <returns>List of files matches your selection</returns>
static public String[] matchFiles( String _dir, String filePattern )
{
if (filePattern.IndexOfAny(new char[] { '*', '?' }) == -1) // Speed up matching, if no asterisk / widlcard, then it can be simply file path.
{
String path = Path.Combine(_dir, filePattern);
if (File.Exists(path))
return new String[] { filePattern };
return new String[] { };
}
String dir = Path.GetFullPath(_dir); // Make it absolute, just so we can extract relative path'es later on.
String[] pattParts = filePattern.Replace("/", "\\").Split('\\');
List<String> scanDirs = new List<string>();
scanDirs.Add(dir);
//
// By default glob pattern matching specifies "*" to any file / folder name,
// which corresponds to any character except folder separator - in regex that's "[^\\]*"
// glob matching also allow double astrisk "**" which also recurses into subfolders.
// We split here each part of match pattern and match it separately.
//
for (int iPatt = 0; iPatt < pattParts.Length; iPatt++)
{
bool bIsLast = iPatt == (pattParts.Length - 1);
bool bRecurse = false;
String regex1 = Regex.Escape(pattParts[iPatt]); // Escape special regex control characters ("*" => "\*", "." => "\.")
String pattern = Regex.Replace(regex1, @"\\\*(\\\*)?", delegate (Match m)
{
if (m.ToString().Length == 4) // "**" => "\*\*" (escaped) - we need to recurse into sub-folders.
{
bRecurse = true;
return ".*";
}
else
return @"[^\\]*";
}).Replace(@"\?", ".");
if (pattParts[iPatt] == "..") // Special kind of control, just to scan upper folder.
{
for (int i = 0; i < scanDirs.Count; i++)
scanDirs[i] = scanDirs[i] + "\\..";
continue;
}
Regex re = new Regex(pattern, RegexOptions.Compiled | RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
int nScanItems = scanDirs.Count;
for (int i = 0; i < nScanItems; i++)
{
String[] items;
if (!bIsLast)
items = Directory.GetDirectories(scanDirs[i], "*", (bRecurse) ? SearchOption.AllDirectories : SearchOption.TopDirectoryOnly);
else
items = Directory.GetFiles(scanDirs[i], "*", (bRecurse) ? SearchOption.AllDirectories : SearchOption.TopDirectoryOnly);
foreach (String path in items)
{
String matchSubPath = path.Substring(scanDirs[i].Length + 1);
if (re.Match(matchSubPath).Success)
scanDirs.Add(path);
}
}
scanDirs.RemoveRange(0, nScanItems); // Remove items what we have just scanned.
} //for
// Make relative and return.
return scanDirs.Select( x => x.Substring(dir.Length + 1) ).ToArray();
} //matchFiles
If you find any bugs, I'll be grad to fix them.