Remove duplicate numerical lines
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@rizla-kostas
We’re going to need some more information.- Can you use the sort lines function? This allows the duplicated lines to appear next to the original, making the regular expression (regex) much easier to create.
- If answer to 1. is “no”, then is the file large, say 20000 lines or more? You see there is an issue with large files, when using a lookahead in the regex function that may mean it will fail.
- When a duplicate is found, which line is to be removed? This question makes more sense if you don’t want the lines sorted. If lines sorted then removing either line makes no difference.
I note that your example has 5 pairs of lines, is this a good example of the real data (high percentage of duplicates)?
Terry
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hi thanks for the reply
Can you use the sort lines function?
it’s about 6.500 lines and i can’t sort themWhen a duplicate is found, which line is to be removed?
the last oneI note that your example has 5 pairs of lines, is this a good example of the real data (high percentage of duplicates)?
no low percentage of duplicates just i wanted to show the kind of data -
We have been around the block with the regular expression solution to this. There are also Pythonscript and OS-level solutions. How about one more KISS version of a Pythonscript? This is about as simple and barebones as it gets…maybe let’s see what kind of limitations are encountered with its use:
from Npp import notepad, editor eol = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n'][notepad.getFormatType()] line_dict = {} line_removal_list = [] for j in range(editor.getLineCount()): l = editor.getLine(j) if len(l) > len(eol): if l in line_dict: line_removal_list.append(j) else: line_dict[l] = None if len(line_removal_list) > 0: editor.beginUndoAction() # remove lines in highest-line-number to lowest-line-number fashion: for j in line_removal_list[::-1]: editor.deleteLine(j) editor.endUndoAction()
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nice this is a python script how to run it in notepad++
you make all lines as arrays and remove duplicates?
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python script how to run it in notepad++
Well you need to install the Pythonscript plugin. :)
The script makes the contents of each lines a dictionary key (thus, unique). As each line is examined, if there is already a key in the dictionary, we know that that line has already occurred, so it is added to a list of line numbers to delete. After all lines have been examined, we run through the list of duplicate line numbers in reverse order (high-to-low) and delete them. Why high-to-low? Because if we delete them low-to-high it would interfere with the remainder of the line numbers, example: if you need to delete lines 5 and 7 and you delete line 5 first, the original line 7 is now line 6! If you delete line 7 first then line 5 is still the one you want to delete next.
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There is a plugin for Notepad++ called “PythonScript”, which embeds a Python interpreter inside the plugin, and allows automation of the Notepad++ GUI/Environment/editor-component through the Python language. If you install PythonScript (some useful links below), then you can run those programs from the PythonScript plugin’s menu.
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- PythonScript HOME
- PythonScript DOWNLOAD
- HELP =
Plugins > Python Script > Context-Help
- Getting Started with Python
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thank you so so so much all of you guys behind notepad++
i will test it tomorrow and i will report back thanks again
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@Scott-Sumner
I just tested your pythonscript and I think it misses 1 dup, possibly due to the last line having no CRLF. I added that and it then worked as expected (for me).I’m trying to learn pythonscript, but unable to see where in your code the problem might be arising.
Terry
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Hey Terry!
Is the last line which doesn’t have a line-ending REALLY a duplicate of an earlier line that does have a line-ending? :) Well, okay, it IS if we are talking about line-endingless content, which we (probably) are.
Anyway, the culprit line in the code would be the one with
editor.getLineCount()
in it. You will have one less line without a line-ending on your last line, and thus therange
function will cause it to go one less iteration. But also to blame is that when the script remembers a previously encountered line, it does so WITH THE LINE-ENDING ON. So there’s a double reason for failure here.I don’t like files without line-endings on their last lines. I sure do wish there was an option in N++ to automatically make sure lines all have proper ends on them. [Of course I have a Pythonscript that makes sure of this for me, so I don’t usually remember to take this stuff into account.]
BTW, note that the script ignores blank lines; something I should have mentioned earlier.
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So @Scott-Sumner, are you going to leave us hanging? You need to publish the code to add the line-ending to the last line, if it’s missing it, so that your above code works properly. :-)
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@PeterJones said:
You need to publish the code to add the line-ending to the last line…so that your above code works properly
HAHa. I will, but right now it looks overcomplicated for general use. :-) I’ll work on it and post back here when it is suitable for general consumption…
In the meanwhile, why not let’s just fix the original code? I found that all that is needed is to change this line:
l = editor.getLine(j)
into this:
l = editor.getLine(j).rstrip('\n\r')
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what about using OrderedDict from collections?
Preserves the ordering and dict keys are unique per se.from Npp import editor from collections import OrderedDict _dict = OrderedDict.fromkeys(editor.getText().splitlines()) editor.setText('\r\n'.join(_dict.keys()))
Eko
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@Eko-palypse said:
what about…?
Sure, why not? Only objection might be the empty line case (my experience is that people usually want their blank lines retained as is, and not removed as duplicates).
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What about this
from Npp import editor lastLineContainsEOL = True if len(editor.getLine(editor.getLineCount()-1)) == 0 else False lines = editor.getText().splitlines() uniqueLines = set(lines) newText = '' for line in lines: if line in uniqueLines or line.strip() == '': newText += line + '\r\n' if line.strip() != '': uniqueLines.remove(line) editor.setText(newText if lastLineContainsEOL else newText[:-2])
- generates unique lines only (ignoring empty lines with and without spaces)
- preserves ordering
- preserves usage of last EOL
Eko
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@Eko-palypse said:
What about this
Sure. I say “whatever works”. Much like I don’t get all fancy about shaving a few characters off a regex, I think with scripts it is to each his own. As long as it does the job, it is super. :-)
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One comment, though: I’m guessing you pretty much exclusively use Windows. I use Windows/Linux about 75%/25%…because of that I have learned to not think that line-endings are always
\r\n
. So scripts I post here will work (that’s the goal anyway) with either Windows or Linux (or even Mac) files.This may be something you want to consider doing as well. But it doesn’t bother me if you don’t because I understand the meaning of it–for someone that just wants to blindly pick up and use a script and doesn’t understand Python, oh and BTW uses Linux files…it could be a problem.
BTW, good job! I like seeing Pythonscripts besides my own posted here. Not many people are doing it anymore. :-(
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@PeterJones said:
You need to publish the code to add the line-ending to the last line, if it’s missing it
Ok, so here it is; I run a similar (but more complicated one for my own needs) from my
startup.py
so that it is always in place–and thus I never have to deal with files without line-endings on their last lines.One thing I don’t like, but haven’t found a good method for handling, is that in certain circumstances (e.g. a Save All), after the script does its work, it can leave you sitting in an tab that is different from the tab that was active before. If people are interested in this script and have ideas about solving that particular problem, I’m interested in hearing them.
Here’s the Pythonscript:
from Npp import notepad, editor, NOTIFICATION def callback_npp_FILEBEFORESAVE(args): line_ending = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n'][notepad.getFormatType()] doc_size = editor.getTextLength() if editor.getTextRange(doc_size - 1, doc_size) != line_ending[-1]: # fix Notepad++'s "broken" functionality and add a line-ending at end-of-file editor.appendText(line_ending) notepad.callback(callback_npp_FILEBEFORESAVE, [NOTIFICATION.FILEBEFORESAVE])
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@Scott-Sumner said:
One comment, though: I’m guessing you pretty much exclusively use Windows. I use Windows/Linux about 75%/25%…because of that I have learned to not think that line-endings are always \r\n. So scripts I post here will work (that’s the goal anyway) with either Windows or Linux (or even Mac) files.
Good point and you offered the solution already, even better :-D
from Npp import editor lastLineContainsEOL = True if len(editor.getLine(editor.getLineCount()-1)) == 0 else False line_ending = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n'][notepad.getFormatType()] lines = editor.getText().splitlines() uniqueLines = set(lines) newText = '' for line in lines: if line in uniqueLines or line.strip() == '': newText += line + line_ending if line.strip() != '': uniqueLines.remove(line) editor.setText(newText if lastLineContainsEOL else newText[:-2])
Eko
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Yes, but you forgot something. :-)
editor.setText(newText if lastLineContainsEOL else newText[:-len(line_ending)])