Regex] Rounding numbers python script does not run properly
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@Alan-Kilborn said:
Replace selected text with? :
Maybe
Would you like to replace the selected text with the following text?
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Well, Pythonscript sizes the dialog box according to contents, so I was trying to keep it as narrow and short as possible to avoid covering too much of the Notepad++ main window. But…I’ve already added more info to make it taller, so why not wider as well? :)
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Would you also publish your code for the interactive replace?
I’m still working on a generic version; may never finish it
Follow-up:
There may not be a reasonable way to script this (the “generic version”); here’s why: There doesn’t seem to be a way to do a “boost-ish” replacement option on a Python string. It’s only possible to do it on in-place text.
What I want to do in the code is pull a copy of the matched text into a Python string and then do a Notepad++ -like replacement operation on that. Sure I can do a Python “re” replacement on it, but that isn’t always going to be equivalent.
Digging deeper, I see there is an open issue on this kind of thing in the Pythonscript code pages, here. But it hasn’t been acted on so it isn’t a reality.
If anyone has thoughts on this, I’m all ears. @Ekopalypse ?
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Ugh. Clearly I meant this Pythonscript issue: https://github.com/bruderstein/PythonScript/issues/101 in the previous post, but it is too late for an edit. :(
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one idea might be to search for matches and replace only those which are
in the same range as the selected text. Something likeif start_pos_selected text <= match_start and end_pos_selected_text >= match_end: replaceSelText
Or did I misunderstood your goal? :-(
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@Ekopalypse said:
did I misunderstood your goal?
Maybe that part. :)
To be able to offer a preview of the yet-to-be-done replacement, I need to know what that replacement will be. I can’t do that without actually doing the replacement. Catch-22. I could do it and then undo it, I suppose, but that gets messy. Mostly it should be OK, but sometimes with regexes Boost can differ from Python’s re.
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what about using a hidden scintilla instance?
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@Ekopalypse said:
what about using a hidden scintilla instance?
That also sounds “messy” (or “involved”) but if you have some snippet to show me it is not so bad…?
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I used it here.
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just be careful about
notepad.destroyScintilla(self.hidden_scintilla)
Currently npp crashes when using this and then request another buffer.
There is already a merged fix but only available on next release. -
This is the issue, I assume: https://github.com/notepad-plus-plus/notepad-plus-plus/issues/4487
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correct, that is the one.
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@Ekopalypse said:
what about using a hidden scintilla instance?
So, like this:
hidden = notepad.createScintilla()
That is actually a nice solution. The hidden instance’s entire text can be set to the matched text from the
editor.research()
. Then thehidden.rereplace()
can be called and the result of the replacement read out into a Python string variable. Thanks, Eko; clearly I would not have thought of this technique without your pointer.just be careful about notepad.destroyScintilla()
This is not a problem as I will do this near the top of the script, and never do a “destroy”:
try: hidden except NameError: hidden = notepad.createScintilla()
and never do a “destroy”
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@Alan-Kilborn said:
I will do this near the top of the script, and never do a “destroy”:
and never do a “destroy”
There really is an “echo” in here, or just me repeating myself and not noticing.
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and never do a “destroy”
:-D never ever - don’t even THINK about it unless your npp version is > 7.7.1 :-D
The hidden instance’s entire text can be set to the matched text from the editor.research(). Then the hidden.rereplace() can b
I guess, hidden.rereplace() is enough if you keep the text from editor and hidden in sync.
The replace function gets a match object which contains the position of the text to be replaced so from the replace function you could start the dialog, or? -
No, I’m not trying to “parallel” the text in the real editor and the hidden. If I set as the hidden editor’s entire text the match from the search, doing the replace on that guarantees the replace will succeed and the entire text left in the hidden editor’s buffer will be the replacement preview text. Long to explain but it seems to work.