# Csope Fork of Cscope version 15.9, with various improvements, because cscope is good and shall not be forgotten. While the original's mainentence seems abandoned and as far as I can tell you need a PhD in autoconf to compile the latest version, Csope is alive and well. # Demo ![demo](docs/csope.GIF) # Before/After ## After ![after](docs/after.jpg) ## Before ![after](docs/before.jpg) # Features #### Search for + C symbol + global definition + assignments to specified symbol + functions called by specified function + functions calling specified function + text string + egrep pattern + file + files #including specified file #### ...and open with your editor. #### Batch change search results **interactively**. #### Save/load/pipe results. # Interface <-- Tab --> +--Version-----------------Case--+ +--------------------------------+ A |+--------------+---------------+| |+------------------------------+| | || Input Window | Result window || || || | |+--------------+ || ? || || || Mode Window | || ----> || Help || % || | || <---- || || || | || ... || || | || | || || || | || | || || || V |+--------------+---------------+| |+------------------------------+| +---------------------Tool Tips--+ +--------------------------------+ # Usacases Csope shines at exploring stranger and obsecure code bases due to its TUI. It sometimes gets mislabeled as a code navigation tool, but the original documentation describes it best as a "code browsing tool". Many tools can jump you to a definition or grep for patterns, but Csope is unqie in that it allows for those and many other functionalities while providing you with a very comprehansible list of all results, ready to fire up your editor at just the spot. An example of its excelence is this project. The Cscope codebase used to be a total mess, fixing it would have been a lost cause, if not for Cscope itself. Well, Csope now. # Improvements/Changes ## User side + Renamed the program, because "cscope" is annoying to type + Improved tui + GNU Readline/History integration ## To the code + Nuked autoconf, replaced with single Makefile + Reorganized the control flow + Encapsulated changes to the TUI into display.c + Encapsulated searching into find.c + Removed "scanner.l" which seems to be an anchient version (and redundant copy) of "fscanner.l" forgotten by all + Removed macro hell put in place to allow compiling on a dead badger + Use stdbool instead of YES/NO macros + Saved kilobytes by stripping trailing whitespace + ...and much more # Installation You will have to compile from source. After you made sure you have the following (dev) libraries installed: ncurses GNU Readline GNU History (should come with Readline) Just run: make This will yield the executable "csope", which you are free to do whatever with. Hint: cp csope /usr/bin/ # Configuration ## Readline The readline integratoin should be complete -please let us know if not-, except for your prompt being used, which could easily break the TUIs display. The rl_readline_name variable will be set to "Csope", so you may have conditional configurations in your .inputrc with the following format: $if Csope # $endif ## Colors All can be configured sucklessly under "config/colors.h". Hopefully the comments are self evident. # Future features / contributor wishlist + providing support for other languages by integrating new lexers (e.g. ctag's)