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    Find and Replace Iteration...

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    • Alan KilbornA
      Alan Kilborn @Ekopalypse
      last edited by

      @Ekopalypse

      That is a good technique but the user has a lot of items. They are probably looking for a table-lookup based replacement. Fortunately we have dealt with that before a few times, one of which is here:

      https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/14548/help-replacing

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • ganesan govindarajanG
        ganesan govindarajan
        last edited by

        @Ekopalypse

        Thanks for the reply. But this technique is not exactly done for 200+ items and messed up.

        So, i need the more specific regex here. The link provided by Alan is not match with my requirement.

        Please advise.
        ganesang

        EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • EkopalypseE
          Ekopalypse @ganesan govindarajan
          last edited by

          @ganesan-govindarajan

          But without knowing your data and what needs to be done exactly how should we know what to offer?
          I mean, by using regex it is essential to know
          a) what the data looks like and
          b) what is needed to be done.
          to be able to find a pattern which fulfills the requirement. The slightest offset will most likely break the regex.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ganesan govindarajanG
            ganesan govindarajan
            last edited by ganesan govindarajan

            Hi @Ekopalypse

            The data in the excel like ,

            seq-0031 seq-XX0001
            seq-0032 seq-XX0002
            seq-0001 seq-XX0003
            seq-0002 seq-XX0004
            seq-0003 seq-XX0005
            seq-0005 seq-XX0006
            seq-0028 seq-XX0007
            seq-0007 seq-XX0008
            seq-0008 seq-XX0009
            seq-0010 seq-XX0010

            the first column value found inside the XML anywhere between the other tags (some times found more than one without any particular order), which needs to be changed respective value as per second column.

            EkopalypseE Alan KilbornA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • EkopalypseE
              Ekopalypse @ganesan govindarajan
              last edited by

              @ganesan-govindarajan

              sorry, but looks like I’m not the one who can solve this puzzle.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Alan KilbornA
                Alan Kilborn @ganesan govindarajan
                last edited by

                @ganesan-govindarajan

                So as time and postings go on, the data is getting more of a pattern to it (which is a good thing for possible solutions). Is the data always as “patterned” as your most recent example shows? Meaning you want to replace seq- followed by four digits with something else (don’t really care what the something-else part is, doesn’t have to follow a pattern)?

                @Ekopalypse

                I feel your pain.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • ganesan govindarajanG
                  ganesan govindarajan
                  last edited by

                  Hi @Alan

                  The pattern of the data maybe vary like as follows,

                  Sup-0010, or fig-0011, or even whatever with three digit of alphabets and hyphen and ended with four digits numbers.

                  They needs to be changed with the format as mentioned above (sup-XX0010 or fig-XX0011 etc… )

                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Alan KilbornA
                    Alan Kilborn @ganesan govindarajan
                    last edited by

                    @ganesan-govindarajan

                    The problem statement keeps changing. Sorry but like @Ekopalypse it appears I am not the one to solve this puzzle either. Good luck to you.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • guy038G
                      guy038
                      last edited by guy038

                      Hello, @ganesan-govindarajan and All,

                      From your posts, I understand that your initial values, to be changed, begin with 3 letters ( let’s say 3 word characters ), followed with an hythen - and end with 4 digits

                      I also understood that any of these values can exist several times, in different locations of your XML file, and that you want to modify all the occurrences of any specific value

                      Finally, the new value, of any initial value, is taken from the second column of an Excel table and I assume that any initial value, in the first column of this table, is unique

                      Am I still right !? If so, here is a solution :


                      • Open a copy of your XMl file in Notepad++

                      • At the very end of the file, add a separator line of, at least, 4 equal signs ( ==== )

                      • Append, after this line, the contents of your Excel, table containing the list of “OLd - New” couples

                      So, let’s suppose, that we get, for instance, the following XML text, containing some seq-... values, followed with the ==== line and the two-columns table :

                      ....
                      ....
                      first value seq-0005
                      ....
                      bla seq-0031
                      ....
                      ....
                      Test seq-0001 Test
                      Test seq-0028 Test
                      ....
                      ....
                      ....
                      
                      Foo bar seq-0031
                      ....
                      Foo bar seq-0002
                      ....
                      seq-0005 Test
                      seq-0001 Test
                      ...
                      seq-0028 Test
                      ....
                          seq-0008
                      ....
                      seq-0008
                      ....
                      ....
                      ====
                      seq-0031 seq-XX0001
                      seq-0032 seq-XX0002
                      seq-0001 seq-XX0003
                      seq-0002 seq-XX0004
                      seq-0003 seq-XX0005
                      seq-0005 seq-XX0006
                      seq-0028 seq-XX0007
                      seq-0007 seq-XX0008
                      seq-0008 seq-XX0009
                      seq-0010 seq-XX0010
                      

                      Then :

                      • Open the Replace dialog ( CTRL + H )

                      • Tick the Match case and Wrap around options

                      • Select the Regular expression search mode

                      • SEARCH (?s)(\w{3}-\d{4})(?=.+^====.+\R\1\h+(?-s)(.+))|^====.+

                      • REPLACE \2

                      • Click once on the Replace all button or several times on the Replace button

                      => Any value of the first column of the ending table, found in your XML file, should be replaced with the appropriate value, of the second column of the table

                      => Then, when no more initial value can be found in the XML file, the regex S/R will delete the appended Excel table, too !

                      And you’ll obtain your expected text :

                      ....
                      ....
                      first value seq-XX0006
                      ....
                      bla seq-XX0001
                      ....
                      ....
                      Test seq-XX0003 Test
                      Test seq-XX0007 Test
                      ....
                      ....
                      ....
                      
                      Foo bar seq-XX0001
                      ....
                      Foo bar seq-XX0004
                      ....
                      seq-XX0006 Test
                      seq-XX0003 Test
                      ...
                      seq-XX0007 Test
                      ....
                          seq-XX0009
                      ....
                      seq-XX0009
                      ....
                      ....
                      

                      Let me know, if any problem !

                      Best regards,

                      guy038

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • ganesan govindarajanG
                        ganesan govindarajan
                        last edited by

                        Hi @guy038

                        You Awesome!!!

                        This is what i expected.

                        Thanks much!!!

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • ganesan govindarajanG
                          ganesan govindarajan
                          last edited by

                          Hi @guy038

                          Can you please explain the regex actually do?

                          It will helpful for me for further regex actions.

                          Thanks!!
                          Ganesan. G

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • guy038G
                            guy038
                            last edited by

                            Hi, @ganesan-govindarajan,

                            Not free presently, but I could give you an explanation by about 10h from now !

                            Cheers,

                            guy038

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • guy038G
                              guy038
                              last edited by guy038

                              Hello, @ganesan-govindarajan,

                              Sorry for the delay ! I also slightly changed the search regex, because, with my previous version, the first line, after the line of equal signs, would never have been reached, in case your xml file, would have contained \n or \r EOL chars, only ( case of Unix or Mac files )


                              So, what means this second version of my previous regex S/R

                              SEARCH (?s)(\w{3}-\d{4})(?=.+^====.*^\1\h+(?-s)(.+))|^====.+

                              REPLACE \2

                              Firstly, the search regex can be split up in the two alternatives :

                              • The regex (?s)(\w{3}-\d{4})(?=.+^====.*^\1\h+(?-s)(.+)), which searches any expression, contained in the first column of the Excel file and replaces it with the corresponding value in the second column of the Excel file

                              • The regex ^====.+ which searches and deletes any text from the line of equal signs till the very end of your XML file

                              • Now, the first alternative can be divided in 3 parts :

                                • (?s) is an in-line modifier which means that a dot symbol . matches any single character, included an EOL one

                                • (\w{3}-\d{4}) represents the string to search for, in your XML file : 3 word characters, followed with a hyphen, followed with 4 digit chars ( A word character is any Unicode single character considered as a letter, or as a digit, or the underscore symbol _ ) ) As it is embedded between parentheses, this occurrence is stored as group 1

                                • Then, the (?=.+^====.*\R\1\h+(?-s)(.+)) structure is called a positive look-ahead, i.e. a condition which must be true, at cursor location ( so, right after (\w{3}-\d{4})) in order that the first alternative has matched ! In other words, IF exists, after the searched expression (\w{3}-\d{4}) :

                                  • A range, possibly multi-lines, of any character, including EOL ones ( .+ ), till a line beginning with 4 equal symbols ( ^==== )

                                  • Followed with a range, possibly null, of any character, including EOL ones, till the group 1 ( the searched string ), beginning a line ( .*^\1 )

                                  • Followed with a non-null range of horizontal blank characters, mostly, the space and tabulation chars ( \h+ ), which is the gap between columns 1 and 2 of an Excel row

                                  • Then followed with any non-null range of standard characters, only, of current line, due to the (?-s) modifier, and stored as group 2, because of the pair of parentheses ( (.+) ), which represents the corresponding expression replacing the searched regex

                              • At the end, when no more string, matching the first alternative \w{3}-\d{4}, can occur, the regex engine tries the second alternative ^====.+, which matches any range of characters, including EOL ones ( .+ ), after the string ====, beginning a line ( ^====), till the very end of the XML file

                              • During replacement :

                                • When a corresponding value ( group 2 ) is found, the searched expression is then replaced with this value \2 ( case of the first alternative )

                                • When the second alternative is used, this means that all the multi-lines block of pairs ( OLD-NEW values ), at the end of the xml file, including the line of equal signs ( ==== ), is selected and, as the second alternative does not contain any group, this multi-lines block is, thus, deleted


                              Hope that this helps a bit ! Refer to the link, below, for further information about regexes :

                              https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/15765/faq-desk-where-to-find-regex-documentation/1

                              BR

                              guy038

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                              • ganesan govindarajanG
                                ganesan govindarajan
                                last edited by

                                Thank you so much @guy038

                                You Genius!! in this field…

                                Thanks
                                Ganesan. G

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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