# Fynd I found GNU find to be slow, so I made it slower by rewriting it in Ruby. Fynd is heavily inspired by the, uh... find command, I guess. ## Is it any good? [No.](http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3067434) ## Installation gem install fynd ## Usage ```ruby require 'fynd' include Fynd # `find /var/log -iname '*system*' -type f` find("/var/log").iname("system").type(:file).files => ["/var/log/system.log", "/var/log/system.log.0.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.1.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.2.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.3.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.4.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.5.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.6.bz2", "/var/log/system.log.7.bz2"] ``` You can even pass the files to a block. ```ruby require 'fynd' include Fynd # `find /var/log -iname '*system` -type f -print find("/var/log").iname("system").type(:file).files do |file| puts file end # Prints out: # /var/log/system.log # /var/log/system.log.0.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.1.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.2.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.3.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.4.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.5.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.6.bz2 # /var/log/system.log.7.bz2 ``` ## Contributing 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request