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    Mark sentence without .

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    • Tomi858T Offline
      Tomi858
      last edited by

      Hi !

      I’ve got sth like this:

      <content contentuid="h00993567g99f6g4d0fg88ffg933b84d61b30">Bla bla bla.</content>
      <content contentuid="h009ab045gf72ag4c8bg8a34g30f26277a7f7">Character name</content>
      <content contentuid="h009c5261g7d14g4c2bg911cgf45c7a0424db">Place name</content>
      <content contentuid="h009cd0cfga9a4g4e6cgbf68g03ac2f570140">*narrator in my mind.*</content>
      

      I want to mark lines with sentences that ending at dot (or those without a dot) also ending at .*
      I was reading some threads with replace but still can’t mark it.

      Sorry for my eng! ;)

      Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Claudia FrankC Offline
        Claudia Frank @Tomi858
        last edited by Claudia Frank

        @Tomi858

        so you are looking for something like this?

        Then use regular expression and below term in find what box

        \.<\/content>
        

        Cheers
        Clauda

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • Tomi858T Offline
          Tomi858
          last edited by

          God… I had extended search mode, not regular… Thanks so much ! <3

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Tomi858T Offline
            Tomi858
            last edited by

            Also how to find lines ending at "." if '’ is random sign ?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Claudia FrankC Offline
              Claudia Frank
              last edited by Claudia Frank

              I assume it isn’t really variable but a predefined set of possible characters, if so
              you can build an alternation class like this

              [\.\*-:]
              

              This class would look for either a period, a asteriks, a dash or a colon.

              If you ask yourself why this backslash appears then it is because regular expressions uses
              special chars for doing something special :-)
              Like the period is used as a placeholder for ONE char and the asteriks is used as a multiplier.
              And if you want to search for those chars literally you need to escape them by putting a backslash
              in front. Now you see, that backslash itself is a special char too and in case you want to look for
              a backslash you need to put another one in front.

              If you want to understand more about regular expression I would recommend reading
              this.

              Cheers
              Claudia

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