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    Regex to find any lines that do NOT have a specific number of a character

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    • Mark YorkovichM
      Mark Yorkovich
      last edited by

      Eko’s exp works for me to find rows with 9 pipes/10 cols. Alan’s exp doesn’t match anything in my file with mostly 9 pipes/10 cols with a few known rows with less than 9 pipes.

      I’m trying to match on rows with greater than or less than 9 pipes.

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

        @Ekopalypse

        Was removing the escaping of the | inside the [ and ] intentional? Yes, I suppose, since it has no special meaning there and doesn’t need escaping.

        don’t understand why there is a need to make sure that a line does not start with a pipe

        I think that with this type of data, fields could be empty, thus if the first field is empty a line would start with a pipe? But, is the regex really saying what I think you implied? I’m saying “not pipe” not just at the start of a line, but for in between fields as well. And I’m only doing it this way because your original attempt using a . expression fails (for some odd and as yet unknown reason). I think I’m getting confused.

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

          @dinkumoil

          ok, I hope I finally understood this sentence

          Match pattern independently of surrounding patterns, and don’t backtrack into it. Failure to match will cause the whole subject not to match.

          which then means that my first attempt, which I was questioning, did backtrack.
          which makes your regex is the one which I, and hopefully @Mark-Yorkovich were looking for.

          @Alan-Kilborn,
          Alan, ja, I guess you are right.

          @Mark-Yorkovich, so does this work on your data and the procedure described by
          @dinkumoil ?

          dinkumoilD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • dinkumoilD
            dinkumoil @Ekopalypse
            last edited by dinkumoil

            @Ekopalypse said:

            ok, I hope I finally understood this sentence

            I got the following hint at https://regex101.com/ when trying your regex:

            A repeated capturing group will only capture the last iteration. Put a capturing group around the repeated group to capture all iterations or use a non-capturing group instead if you’re not interested in the data.

            Then I read https://www.regular-expressions.info/atomic.html

            Together it made me to give the non-capturing group a try.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • Mark YorkovichM
              Mark Yorkovich
              last edited by

              @dinkumoil
              I followed your instructions, but I’m not getting any matches.

              EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • EkopalypseE
                Ekopalypse @Mark Yorkovich
                last edited by Ekopalypse

                @Mark-Yorkovich

                make sure your caret is on the first line if you have not checked wrap around

                Mark YorkovichM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Mark YorkovichM
                  Mark Yorkovich @Ekopalypse
                  last edited by

                  @Ekopalypse
                  Yup, sure is. - No matches - double-checked my settings.

                  To reiterate: My file is mostly 9 pipes/10 cols per line, but some have less and a few more than that and I need to find those.

                  dinkumoilD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dinkumoilD
                    dinkumoil @Mark Yorkovich
                    last edited by dinkumoil

                    @Mark-Yorkovich

                    I generated with the test data of @Ekopalypse a file of 146545 lines and did that what I’ve suggested above - I got the expected result.

                    Be sure that the pipe character in your file is really a pipe character (code 124). There is another one (code 166 in Windows-1252 character encoding) which looks nearly identical:

                    Pipe character: |
                    The other one: ¦

                    Mark YorkovichM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Mark YorkovichM
                      Mark Yorkovich @dinkumoil
                      last edited by

                      @dinkumoil said:

                      @Mark-Yorkovich

                      I generated with the test data of @Ekopalypse a file of 146545 lines and did that what I’ve suggested above - I got the expected result.

                      Be sure that the pipe character in your file is really a pipe character (code 124). There is another one (code 166 in Windows-1252 character encoding) which looks nearly identical:

                      Pipe character: |
                      The other one: ¦

                      Yup - they’re pipes.

                      Here is a good sample of what I’m working with. Lines 1, 9, 10, 11, 16 thru 20 and 36, 37 are single-line records with 9 pipes and 10 columns. Lines 2 thru 8 are one record and together have 9 pipes/10 cols. Similarly, lines 12 through 15 are a single record, and lines 21 thru 35 are a single record.

                      LOREM120|8 |3 |1 |1 |0 |0 |||INST020
                      LOREM120|9 |1 |1 |0 |0 |0 ||Lorem Ipsum Dolor]
                      LOREM: BS/BP

                      LOREM IPSUM:
                      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.|
                      IPSUM16|1 |1 |1 |1 |0 |0 |||3001479
                      IPSUM16|1 |2 |1 |1 |0 |0 |||3003077
                      IPSUM16|11 |0 |1 |0 |0 |0 |||
                      IPSUM16|13 |0 |1 |0 |0 |0 ||Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet
                      consectetur adipiscing elit,
                      sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

                      DOLOR53 1 1 1 2 0 0 3003084
                      DOLOR53 2 3 1 1 0 0 Lorem ipsum
                      DOLOR53 2 4 1 1 0 0 Lorem ipsum
                      LOREM56 8 1 1 1 0 0 Lorem ipsum
                      LOREM56 8 2 1 1 0 0 Lorem ipsum
                      LOREM56 9 1 1 0 0 0 Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

                      consectetur adipiscing elit

                      consectetur adipiscing elit
                      consectetur adipiscing elit

                      consectetur adipiscing elit
                      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet
                      sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

                      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet
                      consectetur adipiscing elit
                      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.|
                      DOLOR19|1 |2 |1 |1 |0 |0 |||3003124
                      LOREM01|1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |0 |||3003024

                      Your suggested regex ^(?>.+?|){9}(?!.+?|) isn’t finding any matches on that

                      EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • EkopalypseE
                        Ekopalypse @Mark Yorkovich
                        last edited by

                        @Mark-Yorkovich

                        because it was assumed that all columns contain data

                        find: ^(?>.*?\|){9}(?!.*?\|) does not make that assumption.

                        Mark YorkovichM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Mark YorkovichM
                          Mark Yorkovich @Ekopalypse
                          last edited by

                          @Ekopalypse said:

                          @Mark-Yorkovich
                          because it was assumed that all columns contain data

                          My bad. I didn’t give you all of the details of what I’m working with.

                          find: ^(?>.*?\|){9}(?!.*?\|) does not make that assumption.

                          This works.

                          So at this point what I’d need to do, ideally, is to do a Find/Replace, finding all of the new line/line feed characters - only in those now-bookmarked lines - and replace them with some other character (spaces, dummy chars, whatever) to get each of those records to be on one line. Can I do a find/replace on just the bookmarked lines? Or perhaps, instead of the multi-step approach, is there a way to do this on the Replace tab, entering a regex in the Find what box that finds those lines and just replace the new line characters with dummy characters in one step?

                          Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Alan KilbornA
                            Alan Kilborn @Mark Yorkovich
                            last edited by

                            @Mark-Yorkovich said:

                            Alan’s exp doesn’t match anything in my file

                            Well, if I copy and paste your “lorem ipsum” data (above) into a new tab and then run my regex (above) on it, I get lines with exactly 9 pipes redmarked, which I thought was the goal (or the inverse of the goal):

                            Imgur

                            So…I really don’t know where the disconnect is…

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Alan KilbornA
                              Alan Kilborn @Mark Yorkovich
                              last edited by

                              @Mark-Yorkovich said:

                              …finding all of the new line/line feed characters - only in those now-bookmarked lines - and replace them with some other character (spaces, dummy chars, whatever) to get each of those records to be on one line

                              Didn’t we do all this the other day?

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Allen BaiA
                                Allen Bai
                                last edited by

                                (.|){9}.

                                how about this?

                                EkopalypseE Allen BaiA 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • EkopalypseE
                                  Ekopalypse @Allen Bai
                                  last edited by

                                  @Allen-Bai

                                  I assume you meant (.\|){9}.
                                  This matches 9 and more pipe delimited lines.

                                  Allen BaiA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • Allen BaiA
                                    Allen Bai @Allen Bai
                                    last edited by

                                    This post is deleted!
                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Allen BaiA
                                      Allen Bai @Ekopalypse
                                      last edited by Allen Bai

                                      @Ekopalypse said:

                                      @Allen-Bai

                                      I assume you meant (.\|){9}.
                                      This matches 9 and more pipe delimited lines.

                                      in fact, I mean…

                                      (。\|){9}。*

                                      but it can’t show correctly, and I don’t know how to put screenshot

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • PeterJonesP
                                        PeterJones
                                        last edited by PeterJones

                                        @Allen-Bai said:

                                        it can’t show correctly,

                                        To quote my boilerplate:

                                        This forum is formatted using Markdown, with a help link buried on the little grey ? in the COMPOSE window/pane when writing your post. For more about how to use Markdown in this forum, please see @Scott-Sumner’s post in the “how to markdown code on this forum” topic, and my updates near the end. It is very important that you use these formatting tips – using single backtick marks around small snippets, and using code-quoting for pasting multiple lines from your example data files – because otherwise, the forum will change normal quotes ("") to curly “smart” quotes (“”), will change hyphens to dashes, will sometimes hide asterisks (or if your text is c:\folder\*.txt, it will show up as c:\folder*.txt, missing the backslash).

                                        For images: upload image to imgur. embed images with the syntax ![](http://i.imgur.com/QTHZysa.png). (please use imgur’s “direct link” with i.imgur.com as the hostname and the appropriate .png or .gif extension, rather than the “image” link, which really links to the HTML-wrapper, and will not embed in the forum)

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • Allen BaiA
                                          Allen Bai @Allen Bai
                                          last edited by

                                          @Allen-Bai said:

                                          (.|){9}.

                                          how about this?

                                          in fact, I mean
                                          (。*\|){9}。*

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • PeterJonesP
                                            PeterJones
                                            last edited by PeterJones

                                            @Allen-Bai said:

                                            in fact, I mean
                                            (。*\|){9}。*

                                            Then why not put it in tick marks? Both the help I linked to and the “how to use markdown code” post explained how to do that, as did my boilerplate text itself.

                                            • `(.*\|){9}.*`

                                            renders as

                                            • (.*\|){9}.*
                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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