Concatenate a directory full of files into a single prompt for use with LLMs
For background on this project see Building files-to-prompt entirely using Claude 3 Opus.
Install this tool using pip
:
pip install files-to-prompt
To use files-to-prompt
, provide the path to one or more files or directories you want to process:
files-to-prompt path/to/file_or_directory [path/to/another/file_or_directory ...]
This will output the contents of every file, with each file preceded by its relative path and separated by ---
.
-
--include-hidden
: Include files and folders starting with.
(hidden files and directories).files-to-prompt path/to/directory --include-hidden
-
--ignore-gitignore
: Ignore.gitignore
files and include all files.files-to-prompt path/to/directory --ignore-gitignore
-
--ignore <pattern>
: Specify one or more patterns to ignore. Can be used multiple times.files-to-prompt path/to/directory --ignore "*.log" --ignore "temp*"
-
c/--cxml
: Output in Claude XML format.files-to-prompt path/to/directory --cxml
-
-o/--output <file>
: Write the output to a file instead of printing it to the console.files-to-prompt path/to/directory -o output.txt
Suppose you have a directory structure like this:
my_directory/
├── file1.txt
├── file2.txt
├── .hidden_file.txt
├── temp.log
└── subdirectory/
└── file3.txt
Running files-to-prompt my_directory
will output:
my_directory/file1.txt
---
Contents of file1.txt
---
my_directory/file2.txt
---
Contents of file2.txt
---
my_directory/subdirectory/file3.txt
---
Contents of file3.txt
---
If you run files-to-prompt my_directory --include-hidden
, the output will also include .hidden_file.txt
:
my_directory/.hidden_file.txt
---
Contents of .hidden_file.txt
---
...
If you run files-to-prompt my_directory --ignore "*.log"
, the output will exclude temp.log
:
my_directory/file1.txt
---
Contents of file1.txt
---
my_directory/file2.txt
---
Contents of file2.txt
---
my_directory/subdirectory/file3.txt
---
Contents of file3.txt
---
Anthropic has provided specific guidelines for optimally structuring prompts to take advantage of Claude's extended context window.
To structure the output in this way, use the optional --cxml
flag, which will produce output like this:
<documents>
<document index="1">
<source>my_directory/file1.txt</source>
<document_content>
Contents of file1.txt
</document_content>
</document>
<document index="2">
<source>my_directory/file2.txt</source>
<document_content>
Contents of file2.txt
</document_content>
</document>
</documents>
To contribute to this tool, first checkout the code. Then create a new virtual environment:
cd files-to-prompt
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
Now install the dependencies and test dependencies:
pip install -e '.[test]'
To run the tests:
pytest