It seems, that I've found a very odd bug in QuickSearch Extended. Regardless of whether the option "A=a" (Case sensitive) enables or disabled, the letter "H" is always treated as case-sensitive.
And it is not some occasional glitch, but it's permanent behavior: multiple switching the option "Case sensitive" on and off, TC restarts, Windows reloads and other usual tricks do not bring any changes.
The quite unpleasant result is obvious: some files may miss in the filtered list in the pane.
Any thoughts?
Total Commander 8.01, Windows XP SP-2.
Sorry, I was not able your email address neither in tcmatch.pdf manual neither in any other doc file.
And it seems, that this forum engine does not allow adding any attachments to posts.
BTW I've detected, that there is no this issue when using QSE plugin with default tcmatch.ini. So it is the result of my own settings.
But I don't see anything in my settings, what one could somehow connect to the issue I've describe above.
Place the two dlls to the Total Commander application directory:
In TCx32 we can put this files in arbitrary directory and point the way in wincmd.ini key tcmatch =.
For example:
tcmatch=Plugins\exe\TCmatch\tcmatch.dll
Any way to do something like in TCx64? Files tcmatch64.dll and tcmatch64.exe must be only in the folder where wincmd.ini is located ?
"I used to feel guilty in Cambridge that I spent all day playing games, while I was supposed to be doing mathematics. Then, when I discovered surreal numbers, I realized that playing games IS math." John Horton Conway
Oh, it work with key tcmatch64
tcmatch64=Plugins\exe\TCmatch\tcmatch64.dll
"I used to feel guilty in Cambridge that I spent all day playing games, while I was supposed to be doing mathematics. Then, when I discovered surreal numbers, I realized that playing games IS math." John Horton Conway
any occurrence of "s" is replaced by "s"
any occurrence of "h" is replaced by "s"
any occurrence of "z" is replaced by "z"
any occurrence of "h" is replaced by "z"
From the help file:
You can create several replacement rules. When the search is in progress, every occurrence of a char from the chars to replace in the filename or in the filter string is replaced by the new text.
You could use the “tcmatch.dic” instead:
Replacement rules
Beside the char replacement rules available in the user interface, it is possible to replace words with help of a dictionary. If there is a file named “tcmatch.dic” (Format: UTF16-LE) then it will be parsed for valid entries. A valid entry in that file is a line that contains a key and a value divided by a tab stop character. The file is not allowed to contain the same key twice.