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Google offers Code Search service

Search giant indexes several billions lines of code

Tom Sanders in California, vnunet.com 05 Oct 2006

Google has unveiled a new service that allows developers to search for software code. 

Google Code Search has indexed several billions lines of code from archives hosted on the web, as well as software control repositories from services like SourceForge and Google Code which host open source projects. 

"We will try to make this useful for everyone from computer science students to serious programmers and even hobbyists and code enthusiasts," Tom Stocky, a product manager with Google, told vnunet.com

The search giant has also published an API that allows third-party developers to integrate a code search box into their development tools.

Google Code Search allows programmers to familiarise themselves with a programming language by finding code samples to get a better understanding of the functions.

"They used to have to think of all the software that was relevant, download it, unzip all the files and search from there. Now they can go to Google Code Search and search from there," said Stocky.

The new service allows searches to be limited to specific languages such as Java or C++ as well as software licences.

It will not index JavaScript that is embedded on live web pages, but developers can search for that code with the regular Google search engine, according to Stocky.

Google is not the first to unveil a code search service. Book publisher O'Reilly launched a beta of its Code Search service last month that allows users to search a combined 2.6 million lines of code published in its books.

© 2006 Incisive Media Investments Ltd

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