Hey guys, I’m following the tutorial above, and in his video he doesn’t do anything specific to show hidden files, but it works for him. My .config/nvim/after/plugin/telescope.lua
file looks like this: I’ve looked up solutions but they all use a different syntax, and none work for me. Any idea how I can make the find_files command also show hidden files by using this syntax? Thanks!
If you have
fd
installed, telescope uses it’s settings including ignore files (including.ignore
and.gitignore
etc). So if have the default settings forfd
to show hidden files, telescope will respect that.Otherwise, if you want to have hidden files only in telescope without changing the default behavior of
fd
, when using your key binding, change it as follows:vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>ff", function() builtin.find_files({hidden=true}) end, {})
Edit: Change to keybind format Edit2: Wrap builtin in function call
Hey, I only just had the time to try this out. I edited it as you suggested, but I still get an error when I
:so
after writing the file. Also, I don’t have anyfd
command, and I’m not aware of anything extra that I added to nvim calledfd
.You will need to wrap the third argument to keymap.set in a function, like so:
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>ff", function() builtin.find_files({hidden=true}) end, {})
This seems to work, but for some reason when I do it, it gives me a massive list of all files (recursively) in the directory I ran nvim from. So if I run it in home, its going to be a massive list
Sorry, I missed the previous message. Glad you got it working with the help of @[email protected].
Regarding the massive list, yeah that is expected. If you haven’t got fd or rg installed in you system, telescope falls back to regular
find
. Find doesn’t have any sort of builtin ignore list, so it just lists all the files. If you are using thebuiltin.find_files
normally, I think it executes (at least something close to)find -not -path "*/.*" -type f
With the
hidden=true
, it does something along the lines offind . -type f
Both of these commands are executed from the
cwd
(normally the directory you started nvim in). If you want it only show to a certain depth, you can use the telescope’s setup to change the defaultfind_command
telescope.setup({ pickers = { find_files = { find_command = { "find", "-maxdepth", "3", ".", "-type", "f"}, }, }, }
Modify that to your requirement and then use the keymap to call
builtin.find_files()
and it should work.Hey, its me, 300 years after your initial reply :3
I installed
fd
and it seems to be working great now. Thanks for the tip!