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    Delete lines in multiple text/DAT files that contain specific characters

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    • Adam BowskyA Offline
      Adam Bowsky @supasillyass
      last edited by

      @supasillyass It worked! thank you!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Adam BowskyA Offline
        Adam Bowsky
        last edited by

        @supasillyass It worked for files that had 1 digit in front of the text. Some of the files have 2, 3, and 4 digits, EX:

        11N90-SS9035X 00000000
        311N90-SS9035X 00000000
        6001N90-SS9035X 00000000

        Unfortunately, I am not sure of what the switches do, or if there is a different variance I need to use.

        \r\n[ ]*.N90-.*00000000$

        supasillyassS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Michael VincentM Offline
          Michael Vincent
          last edited by

          @Adam-Bowsky

          How about:

          \r\n\s+\d{1,4}N90-.*\s+00000000$
          

          The \r\n matches a windows carriage return, line feed. If you’re not using Windows (CR/LF) but rather Unix (LF), just remove the ‘\r’.

          The \s+ means match white space at least once but get as many as possible (you said there is preceding space on each line).

          The \d{1,4} means match a digit at least once, but not more than 4 times - you said “Some of the files have 2, 3, and 4 digits”.

          The N90- is self explanatory

          The .* means match any character (.) or or more times (*).

          The \s+ is spacing again before all the trailing '0’s, which themselves are self-explanatory.

          Finally, the $ is stop at the end of the line.

          Adam BowskyA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • Michael VincentM Offline
            Michael Vincent
            last edited by

            Using PREGGER:

            PS VinsWorldcom@:~> pregger "/\r\n\s+\d{1,4}N90-.*\s+00000000$/"
            The regular expression:
            
            (?-imsx:\r\n\s+\d{1,4}N90-.*\s+00000000$)
            
            matches as follows:
            
            NODE                     EXPLANATION
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            (?-imsx:                 group, but do not capture (case-sensitive)
                                     (with ^ and $ matching normally) (with . not
                                     matching \n) (matching whitespace and #
                                     normally):
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              \r                       '\r' (carriage return)
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              \n                       '\n' (newline)
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              \s+                      whitespace (\n, \r, \t, \f, and " ") (1 or
                                       more times (matching the most amount
                                       possible))
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              \d{1,4}                  digits (0-9) (between 1 and 4 times
                                       (matching the most amount possible))
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              N90-                     'N90-'
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              .*                       any character except \n (0 or more times
                                       (matching the most amount possible))
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              \s+                      whitespace (\n, \r, \t, \f, and " ") (1 or
                                       more times (matching the most amount
                                       possible))
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              00000000                 '00000000'
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
              $                        before an optional \n, and the end of the
                                       string
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            )                        end of grouping
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            
            PS VinsWorldcom@:~>
            
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            • supasillyassS Offline
              supasillyass @Adam Bowsky
              last edited by

              @Adam-Bowsky

              The dot indicated matches a single character:

              \r\n[ ]*.N90-.*00000000$
                      ^
              

              So change it to match a string of digits:

              \r\n[ ]*[0-9]*N90-.*00000000$
                      ^^^^^^
              

              There’s also an edge case not matched where the first line has N90-, so follow up with: ^[ ]*[0-9]*N90-.*00000000\r\n

              Adam BowskyA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • Adam BowskyA Offline
                Adam Bowsky @Michael Vincent
                last edited by

                @Michael-Vincent thank you! I believe this worked correctly. 1 question… “the match a digit at least once”… does this include preceding zeros? For example, if the line had looked like this: 00001N90-SS9035X? If so, would I change \d{1,4} to \d{1,5}?

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                • Michael VincentM Offline
                  Michael Vincent
                  last edited by

                  @Adam-Bowsky said:

                  For example, if the line had looked like this: 00001N90-SS9035X? If so, would I change \d{1,4} to \d{1,5}?

                  It does not include preceding zeros by default. Zeros (0) are numbers (digits) so they would count towards the 4 maximum ( { …, 4} ). You’re correct in that if you had 4 leading zeros, then \d{1,5} would match it.

                  I like to be precise in my RegEx (as precise as possible) to not catch anything I shouldn’t. I’d rather be cautious than aggressive when doing a bulk replace like this. You could just use \d+ which would match at least 1 and as many digits in a row (similar to the \s+ we’ve been using).

                  Cheers.

                  Adam BowskyA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • Adam BowskyA Offline
                    Adam Bowsky @supasillyass
                    last edited by

                    @supasillyass thanks!

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Adam BowskyA Offline
                      Adam Bowsky @Michael Vincent
                      last edited by

                      @Michael-Vincent thanks again!

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Adam BowskyA Offline
                        Adam Bowsky
                        last edited by

                        Re: Delete lines in multiple text/DAT files that contain specific characters

                        Hello,

                        I have been using this process since you were kind enough to help me, and just notices that I am running into a problem with this expression: \r\n\s+\d{1,4}N90-.*\s+00000000$. in addition to deleting the line that has the N90- with a , it is also deleting the line above it. For example, the line above was deleted in addition to the line that I wanted to delete. This is happening on every file where N90- is present. Do you have any idea why this is happening?

                              10DTP-1040K           00000000  This should not have been deleted, but was.
                              10N90-SS7784X         00000000 This was deleted correctly.
                        
                        Adam BowskyA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Adam BowskyA Offline
                          Adam Bowsky @Adam Bowsky
                          last edited by

                          @Michael-Vincent

                          Hello,

                          I have been using this process since you were kind enough to help me, and just notices that I am running into a problem with this expression: \r\n\s+\d{1,4}N90-.*\s+00000000$. in addition to deleting the line that has the N90- with a , it is also deleting the line above it. For example, the line above was deleted in addition to the line that I wanted to delete. This is happening on every file where N90- is present. Do you have any idea why this is happening?

                            10DTP-1040K           00000000  This should not have been deleted, but was.
                            10N90-SS7784X         00000000 This was deleted correctly.
                          
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • guy038G Offline
                            guy038
                            last edited by guy038

                            Hello, @adam-bowsky, @michael-vincent, @supasillyass and All,

                            Personally, I would use the following regex S/R, which should work in all the discussed cases !

                            I simply assume that the N90- string, with this exact case, is preceded with, at least, one digit !

                            SEARCH (?-si)^\h*\d+N90-.*\R?

                            REPLACE Leave EMPTY

                            Of course, the Regular expression search mode is selected and the Wrap around option is ticked

                            Give a try !

                            I’ll give you some explanations when everything is right ;-))

                            Best Regards

                            guy038

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