# exa [![Build status](https://travis-ci.org/ogham/exa.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/ogham/exa) exa is a replacement for `ls` written in Rust. ## Screenshot ![Screenshot of exa](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ogham/exa/master/screenshot.png) ## Options - **-1**, **--oneline**: display one entry per line - **-a**, **--all**: show dot files - **-b**, **--binary**: use binary (power of two) file sizes - **-d**, **--list-dirs**: list directories as regular files - **-g**, **--group**: show group as well as user - **-h**, **--header**: show a header row - **-H**, **--links**: show number of hard links column - **-i**, **--inode**: show inode number column - **-l**, **--long**: display extended details and attributes - **-r**, **--reverse**: reverse sort order - **-s**, **--sort=(field)**: field to sort by - **-S**, **--blocks**: show number of file system blocks - **-x**, **--across**: sort multi-column view entries across You can sort by **name**, **size**, **ext**, **inode**, or **none**. ## Installation exa is written in [Rust](http://www.rust-lang.org). You'll have to use the nightly -- I try to keep it up to date with the latest version when possible. Once you have it set up, a simple `cargo build` will pull in all the dependencies and compile exa.