NAME
lookup - search the internet from your terminal
VERSION
Version 0.04.
USAGE
lookup [--help] [--man] [--abbrevs] [--config-file FILE] [--sites]
[--web-browser COMMAND] [--abbrevs] SITE QUERY
EXAMPLES
# search google for the phrase 'perl is pretty awesome'
lookup google 'perl is pretty awesome'
# same thing, with abbreviated SITE g (or go, or goo, or goog
# or ... you get the idea)
lookup g 'perl is pretty awesome'
# ditto, but arguments to QUERY are not quoted
lookup google perl is pretty awesome
DESCRIPTION
This is a simple command line program which lets you search the internet
from the terminal. It's not exactly the most original idea out there. I
personally have used various programs which pretty much do the same
thing, (most of these even offer better user interface): custom web
search feature in Firefox, similar feature in Quicksilver
and Launchy , a fairly
sophisticated command line program called googlecl
, and an emacs lisp library called
webjump .
But this raises quiet a few problems, namely:
* The inability to share my own custom sites defined in one program
with another.
* Some programs are tied to a specific platform, e.g. Quicksilver on
OSX, Launchy on Windows, and webjump on emacs :p. See also: problem
#1.
This program offers a simple solution to said problems. It uses a plain
text file configuration which you can use to add your own custom sites
(and aliases, but more on that later). You can also use it to interface
with other programs, see the section "INTEGRATION WITH EMACS" for an
example.
By default you're only able to search with google. You can search with
more sites by putting the following in the file ~/.lookuprc (see
"CONFIGURATION FILE").
[sites]
bing = http://www.bing.com/search?q=%(query)
Assuming that's the only thing you put in the config file (to make sure
that the abbreviations don't clash), you'll be able to search with bing
with either one of the following commands:
lookup bing foobar
lookup bin foobar
lookup bi foobar
lookup b foobar
OPTIONS
REQUIRED
SITE
The site name, which can be abbreviated as long as the name remains
unique.
QUERY
The query string. For convenience, the arguments do not have to be
quoted/protected from the shell since the rest of the arguments
(after SITE) are assumed to be the query string and eventually will
be joined with the space character. These two commands work exactly
the same:
lookup google 'foo bar baz'
vs
lookup google foo bar baz
OPTIONAL
-h, --help
Print short help message and exit.
-m, --man
Print the full documentation and exit. Make sure to read this
document if you want to add your own sites or aliases.
-v, --version
Print this program version and exit.
-c, --config-file FILE
Use a different configuration file. Default location is ~/.lookuprc.
-a, --abbrevs
List all sites with their valid abbreviations and exit.
-s, --sites
List all site names with their corresponding url and exit.
-w, --web-browser COMMAND
Specify a different command to run the web browser. By default this
program uses whatever command does the module Browser::Open return
to open the web browser. You can use this option to specify other
command to execute.
NOTE: if you're using cygwin, you currently must specify this option
(see "CAVEATS, BUGS AND TODOS").
lookup google foo -w 'cygstart'
Other example:
lookup google foo -w 'open -a Safari'
On OSX, the above command will make this program use the application
"Safari" (obviously it won't work on other platforms).
CONFIGURATION FILE
You can manage user-defined sites and their aliases by putting the
information in the configuration file, by default located at ~/.lookuprc
(although you can change it with the option --config-file).
It uses the ubiquitous INI file syntax. Sites information should be put
under the heading called "[sites]" and aliases under the heading
"[alias]". Lines that are starting with the characters "#" or ";" are
ignored. Whitespace in either the key or the value is legal.
SITES
The section "[sites]" is where we defined our own sites. Each item
contains a pair of key and value, where the key is the name of the site,
and the value is the url. For example:
[sites]
metacpan = https://metacpan.org/search?q=%(query)
This add a new site called "metacpan" which is associated with the url
"https://metacpan.org/search?q=%(query)". The string "%(query)" will be
replaced with the query string supplied to the option QUERY.
ALIASES
Aliases let us shorten the site name, where the key is the alias name
and the value is an already existing site name (this program will print
a warning message if you specify an alias that doesn't point to a valid
site).
Continuing from the previous example, we can shorten the name "metacpan"
into "m" by putting the following lines in the configuration file:
[alias]
m = metacpan
Now we can search for module called "Some::Module" on metacpan
by invoking the command:
lookup m Some::Module
EXAMPLE OF CONFIGURATION FILE
Here's an example of configuration file, feel free to use it as a
starting point.
[sites]
duckduckgo = http://duckduckgo.com/?q=%(query)
emacswiki = http://google.com/search?q=site:emacswiki.org %(query)
github = https://github.com/search?q=%(query)
google lucky = http://google.com/search?btnI=1&q=%(query)
imdb = http://www.imdb.com/find?q=%(query)
metacpan = https://metacpan.org/search?q=%(query)
perldoc = http://perldoc.perl.org/search.html?q=%(query)
search cpan = http://search.cpan.org/search?query=%(query)&mode=all
wikipedia = http://en.wikipedia.org/?search=%(query)
youtube = http://www.youtube.com/results?q=%(query)
[alias]
ddg = duckduckgo
g = google
lucky = google lucky
wi = wikipedia
y = youtube
EXTRAS
INTEGRATION WITH EMACS
See the file etc/lookup.el. Short
demonstrating the
usage of lookup within emacs.
CAVEATS, BUGS, AND TODOS
* Opening web browser in cygwin does not work
Due to this bug
in
Browser::Open.
AUTHOR
Ahmad Syaltut
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Ahmad Syaltut.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.