1.1.0 β€’ Published 3 years ago

@darthcucumber/eyes-on v1.1.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

Eyes-on is a minimal Cross-platform command line file watcher which lets user watch for modification/deletion over single/multiple files.

πŸ“ƒFeatures/Todos

  • Watches for modification and deletion in files
  • Users can change the checking interval of eyeson based on their needs
  • Users can pass command to execute which triggers when any file in watch list is modified.

πŸ”§Installation

Download suitable Eyeson execuatble from here

after downloading the suitable binary file, set the path variable for the binary like so:

For macOs and Linux

PATH="/path/to the downloaded/binary/file:$PATH"

or

if your have node js installed then use:

npm install -g @darthcucumber/eyes-on

πŸ’»Usage

Commands and Flags

enter image description here

Examples

  • Watching over single file
eyeson watch file1.txt

watches over file1.txt

  • Watching over multiple files
eyeson watch file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt

watches over the file name provided as agrs. note: if any of the file provided as agrs does not exists then it stops watching and exits.

  • Watching over all the files in current directory
eyeson watch *

gives following result: enter image description here

  • Watching over specific files in current directory
eyeson watch *.js

only watches for all js files in the directory gives following result: enter image description here

  • Changing watch interval time
eyeson watch *.js -t=1000

this changes the interval to 1000ms (1s) i.e the interval at which eyeson checks for file modification. Takes input in milliseconds. Default is 2s or 2000ms.

  • Passing single line commands
eyeson watch test.py -c="python3 test.py"

this executes python3 test.py (runs the python file test.py) command on any modification in the files its watching over. gives following result:

enter image description here

  • Passing multiple line commands
eyeson watch test.cpp -c="g++ -o test test.cpp
./test"

this executes g++ -o test test.cpp (compiles test.cpp) first and then executes ./test (runs the cpp program) on any modification in the files its watching over. This feature comes in very handy.

gives following result:

enter image description here