# glob.[go](https://golang.org) Simple globbing library. ## Install ```shell go get github.com/gobwas/glob ``` ## Example ```go package main import "github.com/gobwas/glob" func main() { var g glob.Glob // create simple glob g = glob.New("*.github.com") g.Match("api.github.com") // true // create new glob with set of delimiters as ["."] g = glob.New("api.*.com", ".") g.Match("api.github.com") // true g.Match("api.gi.hub.com") // false // create new glob with set of delimiters as ["."] // but now with super wildcard g = glob.New("api.**.com", ".") g.Match("api.github.com") // true g.Match("api.gi.hub.com") // true // create glob with single symbol wildcard g = glob.New("?at") g.Match("cat") // true g.Match("fat") // true g.Match("at") // false // create glob with single symbol wildcard and delimiters ["f"] g = glob.New("?at", "f") g.Match("cat") // true g.Match("fat") // false g.Match("at") // false } ``` ## Performance In comparison with [go-glob](https://github.com/ryanuber/go-glob), it is ~2.7x faster (on my personal Mac), because my glob is compiling patterns for multiple usages. If you will not use compiled `glob.Glob` object, and do `g := glob.New(pattern); g.Match(...)` every time, then your code will be about ~3x slower. Run `go test bench=.` from source root to see the benchmarks: Test | Operations | Speed -----|------------|------ github.com/gobwas/glob | 20000000 | 165 ns/op github.com/ryanuber/go-glob | 10000000 | 452 ns/op