</inlinemediaobject><guiicon>Search in Subfolders</guiicon></term>
<listitem>
<para>This button allows you to search/replace recursively in the subfolders of your base directory.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<inlinemediaobject>
@ -316,7 +328,8 @@
</textobject>
</mediaobject>
</screenshot>
<para>The <guilabel>Results</guilabel> view shows the name of the files that contain the strings you have to retrieve (and replace), their path, their size, the number of strings found and the user id of the files. This view also provides the exact position of each match. You can also open a file by clicking with the &RMB; on an list entry that contains line and column position.</para>
<para>The <guilabel>Results</guilabel> view shows the name of the files that contain the strings you have to retrieve (and replace), their path, their size, the number of strings found and the user id of the files. This view also provides the exact position of each match. The columns can be sorted either ascending or descending by clicking on the column headers.</para>
<para>You can open a file by clicking with the &RMB; on a list entry, by single/double clicking (depending on your mouse settings) on an entry or alternatively by selecting an item and pressing Enter.</para>
<para>The <guilabel>New Session</guilabel> dialog is used to setup the basic parameters needed by &tdefilereplace; to work. It consists of two tabs, <guilabel>General</guilabel> and <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel>.
<para>The <guilabel>Customize Search/Replace Session</guilabel> dialog is used to setup the basic parameters needed by &tdefilereplace; to work. It consists of two tabs, <guilabel>General</guilabel> and <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel>.
<para>When you want to begin a new session the first step is to click on the <link linkend="tdefilereplace-the-toolbar"><guiicon>New Session</guiicon> button</link>. Then you must enter the base path and a sequence of shell-like wildcards to use as filter.</para>
<para>When you want to begin a new session the first step is to click on the <link linkend="tdefilereplace-the-toolbar"><guiicon>Customize Search/Replace Session</guiicon> button</link>. Then you must enter the base path and a sequence of shell-like wildcards to use as filter.</para>
<para>Then you could set some useful options, like searching in all the subfolders, doing a case-sensitive search, enabling commands and/or regular expressions<footnote id="performancewarning"><para>Please note that regular expressions and commands could slow down the speed performances.</para></footnote>, doing a backup copy of each file before replacing.</para>
<para>If you want to start searching, you can put a string in the search box and press <guibutton>Search Now</guibutton>, otherwise leave the search box empty and press <guibutton>Search Later</guibutton>.</para>
&tdefilereplace; is currently part of &tdewebdev; package, so, in order to install it, you have to get a copy of &tdewebdev;. Note that if you are using a &kde; installation provided by your OS vendor, probably you already have &tdewebdev; installed; in this case, you can use &tdefilereplace; either by opening &quantaplus; Web editor, or by calling it directly (unless you have an old &kde; version). Else you can download the &tdewebdev; package from the Internet: please refer to <ulink url="http://kdewebdev.org">&tdewebdev; home site</ulink> for more information.
<!--&install.intro.documentation;-->
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="requirements">
<title>Requirements</title>
<para>In order to use the command <link linkend="available-commands">[$mathexp:<replaceable>some_math_expression</replaceable>$]</link> you should install the &bc; mathematical utility (version 1.06 or newer) written by Philip A. Nelson (<email>philnelson@acm.org</email>).</para>
</sect1>
<appendix id="requirements">
<title>Requirements</title>
<para>In order to use the command <link linkend="available-commands">[$mathexp:<replaceable>some_math_expression</replaceable>$]</link> you should install the &bc; mathematical utility (version 1.06 or newer) written by Philip A. Nelson (<email>philnelson@acm.org</email>).</para>