[![](https://img.shields.io/travis/Aaronepower/tokei.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/Aaronepower/tokei) [![](https://img.shields.io/crates/d/tokei.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/tokei) [![](https://img.shields.io/github/issues-raw/Aaronepower/tokei.svg)](http://github.com/Aaronepower/tokei/issues) Tokei is a program that allows you to count code, quickly. ## Example Output This is tokei running on it's own directory ``` $ tokei . ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Language Files Lines Code Comments Blanks ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Autoconf 1 9 7 1 1 Handlebars 1 235 218 0 17 JSON 1 1205 1205 0 0 Markdown 4 553 553 0 0 Rust 12 1803 1080 517 206 TOML 1 86 70 0 16 YAML 2 71 68 3 0 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total 22 3962 3201 521 240 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ``` ## [Documentation](https://docs.rs/tokei) ## Table of Contents - [Canonical Source](#canonical-source) - [Installation](#installation) - [How to use Tokei](#how-to-use-tokei) - [Options](#options) - [Supported Languages](#supported-languages) - [Changelog](CHANGELOG.md) - [Common Issues](#common-issues) - [Copyright](#copyright) ## Canonical Source The canonical source of this repo is hosted on [GitHub](https://github.com/Aaronepower/tokei). If you have a GitHub account, please make your issues, and pull requests there. ## Installation ### Automatic If you have [`cargo 0.6.0>=`](https://www.rust-lang.org/downloads.html) installed just run the `cargo install` command. ```shell $ cargo install tokei ``` ### Manual #### Fedora 64 bit Install rust and cargo from either the [official page](https://www.rust-lang.org) or use a copr repo such as [Rust](https://copr.fedoraproject.org/coprs/phnxrbrn/rust/) ```shell $ dnf copr enable phnxrbrn/tokei $ dnf install tokei ``` #### Other ```shell $ git clone https://github.com/Aaronepower/tokei.git $ cd tokei $ cargo build --release ``` ##### Linux ``` # sudo mv target/release/tokei /usr/local/bin ``` ##### OSX ``` # sudo mv target/release/tokei /usr/local/bin/tokei ``` ##### Windows - Create a folder for tokei - search for `env` - open "edit your enviroment variables" - edit `PATH` - append folder path to the end of the string ie: `;C:/tokei/;` ## How to use Tokei #### Basic usage This is the basic way to use tokei. Which will report on the code in `./foo` and all subfolders. ```shell $ tokei ./foo ``` #### Multiple folders To have tokei report on multiple folders in the same call simply add a comma, or a space followed by another path. ```shell $ tokei ./foo ./bar ./baz ``` ```shell $ tokei ./foo, ./bar, ./baz ``` #### Excluding folders The `--exclude` option accepts a comma-separated list of strings. Any file or directory containing a term will be ignored: ```shell $ tokei ./foo --exclude node_modules,.cache,tmp target ``` #### Sorting output By default tokei sorts alphabetically by language name, however using `--sort` tokei can also sort by any of the columns. `blanks, code, comments, lines` ```shell $ tokei ./foo --sort code ``` #### Outputing file statistics By default tokei only outputs the total of the languages, and using `--files` flag tokei can also output individual file statistics. ```shell $ tokei ./foo --files ``` #### Outputting into different formats Tokei normally outputs into a nice human readable format designed for the terminal. There is also using the `--output` option various other formats that are more useful for bringing the data into another program. **Currently supported formats** - JSON `--output json` - YAML `--output yaml` - TOML `--output toml` - CBOR `--output cbor` ```shell $ tokei ./foo --output json ``` #### Reading in stored formats Tokei can also take in the outputted formats added the previous results to it's current run. Tokei can take either a path to a file, the format passed in as a value to the option, or from stdin. ```shell $ tokei ./foo --input ./stats.json ``` ## Options ``` Tokei 4.3.0 Aaron P. Count Code, Quickly. USAGE: Tokei [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] ... FLAGS: -f, --files Will print out statistics on individual files. -h, --help Prints help information -l, --languages Prints out supported languages and their extensions. -V, --version Prints version information -v Set verbose output level: 1 for File IO errors 2: for unknown extensions OPTIONS: -e, --exclude Ignore all files & directories containing the word. -i, --input Gives statistics from a previous tokei run. Can be given a file path, or "stdin" to read from stdin. -o, --output Outputs Tokei in a specific format. [values: cbor, json, toml, yaml] -s, --sort Will sort based on column [values: files, lines, blanks, code, comments] ARGS: ... The input file(s)/directory(ies) ``` ## Supported Languages If there is a language that you want added submit a pull request with the following information - Name of language - File Extension - The comment syntax (_Does it have block comments? is it the same as C?_) ``` ActionScript Ada Assembly ASP ASP.Net Autoconf BASH Batch C C Header Clojure CoffeeScript ColdFusion ColdFusion CFScript Coq C++ C++ Header C# C Shell CSS D Dart Device Tree Erlang Forth FORTRAN Legacy FORTRAN Modern GLSL Go Handlebars Haskell HTML HEX Idris Intel HEX Isabelle JAI Java JavaScript Julia JSON JSX Kotlin Lean LESS LD Script LISP Lua Makefile Markdown Mustache Nim Objective C Objective C++ OCaml Oz Pascal Perl Polly PHP Protocol Buffers Prolog Python QCL R Razor Ruby Ruby HTML Rust ReStructuredText Sass Scala Standard ML SQL Swift TeX Plain Text TOML TypeScript Vim Script Unreal Script Wolfram XML YAML Zsh ``` ## Common issues ### Tokei says I have a lot of D code, but I know there is no D code! This is likely due to `gcc` generating `.d` files. Until the D people decide on a different file extension, you can always exclude `.d` files using the `-e --exclude` flag like so ``` $ tokei . -e .d ``` ## Copyright and License (C) Copyright 2015 by Aaron Power and contributors See CONTRIBUTORS.md for a full list of contributors. Tokei is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). See [LICENCE-APACHE](./LICENCE-APACHE), [LICENCE-MIT](./LICENCE-MIT) for more information.