Thanks for your answers. 
Regarding the javaresource I mentioned, I was referring to this: 
http://ant.apache.org/manual/CoreTypes/resources.html#javaresource

If I'm changing the classpath to a path (e.g. a list of directory) and adding 
support for patternset instead of a single file, this is the thing I need. 

BTW, the path are not really related (e.g. not same ancestor)

I think I will implement some custom task.

Thanks again...
Mikael.S

-----Original Message-----
From: Dominique Devienne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, 25 January, 2007 01:05
To: Ant Users List
Subject: Re: filelist/fileset with multiple directory

> 1. From my understanding the selector are part of a fileset, but in a fileset 
> the dir attribute is mandatory and point only to one directory.
> So is really a selector the appropriate choice?

Right. But you can always use a common parent dir, and later use
filename mappers. This does assume that the dirs have a common
ancestor, which was my case. I don't have an example use of this
selector to show (at least no right now), but I vaguely remember I
used a <dirset> somewhere.

> 2. From the code the selector create a lot of other selector (one per 
> directory) is it really the best thing to do? I mean in the performance point 
> of view?

Not really. This code was used against a large file hierarchy (the
result of compiling 5000+ java sources, so probably upward of 10K+
files), and it was not that slow. Just traversing that many files is
slow by itself in Java ;-)

But sure, I simply used the easiest path, which is to reuse as much
code as possible. That's a none-trivial selector in very few lines of
code ;-)

> 3. Won't you use resource instead of selector? This seems very simetric to 
> the javaresource (instead of class I'm searching files)

Not sure I'm following here.

In any case, I simply supplied example code that provided quick
scaffolding to write a selector made of other selectors, complementing
Stefan's answer.

In your case, you must have an explicit list of pseudo-patterns, in
the sense that they are not "patterns" but relative and resolved
filenames. If the files are really coming from unrelated dirs, then
you cannot gather them in a <fileset>, which requires a basedir. You
can only use a <filelist> I guess. And a filelist requires explicit
absolute filenames.

--DD

If you have an explicit list of patterns to look for, writting a
<script> or a task ma

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