I often find find myself doing a workflow like this:
$ find . |grep somefile
./tmp/somefile.xml
./test/another-somefile.txt
(review output)
$ vim ./tmp/somefile.xml
Now, it would be neat if there was some convenient way of using the output of the find command and feed it to vim.
The best I've come up with is:
$ nth () { sed -n $1p; }
$ find . |grep somefile
./tmp/somefile.xml
./test/another-somefile.txt
(review output)
$ vim `!!|nth 2`
I was wondering if there are other, maybe prettier, ways of accomplishing the same thing?
To clarify, I want a convenient way of grabbing the nth line from a previously run command to quickly open that file for editing in vim, without having to cut & paste the filename with the mouse or tab-complete my way through the file path.