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    • Thomas 2020T
      Thomas 2020
      last edited by

      I have it like this:

      abc
      1
      2
      3
      

      It should look like this:

      abc 123
      
      PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Thomas 2020T
        Thomas 2020
        last edited by Thomas 2020

        I want to find quotation marks:

        "
        

        Can I search for 0022 or (0x22) instead "
        e.g
        Schowek02.jpg

        that you understand some regex concepts

        I agree… some.
        I’ve been practicing for about 3 weeks

        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Alan KilbornA
          Alan Kilborn @Thomas 2020
          last edited by

          @Pan-Jan

          \x22

          Thomas 2020T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • PeterJonesP
            PeterJones @Thomas 2020
            last edited by PeterJones

            @Pan-Jan said in RegEx problems:

            I have it like this:

            abc
            1
            2
            3
            

            It should look like this:

            abc 123
            
            • FIND = (?-s)^(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)$
            • REPLACE = $1\x20$2$3$4
            Thomas 2020T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Thomas 2020T
              Thomas 2020 @PeterJones
              last edited by

              @PeterJones

              ABC
              1
              2
              3
              4
              5
              
              ABC 12345
              

              ZNAJDŹ = (?-s)^(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)$
              REPLACE = $1\x20$2$3$4$5$6

              And when there are more than 5?

              PeterJonesP Terry RT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Thomas 2020T
                Thomas 2020 @Alan Kilborn
                last edited by

                @Alan-Kilborn
                Thanks
                in fact, I’ve seen \x20 many times but didn’t associate it.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • PeterJonesP
                  PeterJones @Thomas 2020
                  last edited by

                  @Pan-Jan said in RegEx problems:

                  And when there are more than 5?

                  As far as I know, you have to keep on adding more groups.

                  There may be some regex that would allow finding one line, followed by one or more lines; join with a space between the first two, and join without space on any additional lines. But I don’t know what it would be, and our resident regex magician is on holiday this month. But maybe one of the other gurus has some ideas.

                  Thomas 2020T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Thomas 2020T
                    Thomas 2020 @PeterJones
                    last edited by Thomas 2020

                    @PeterJones
                    I tried ((.*)\R){6} instead (.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R(.*)\R
                    but nothing works.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Terry RT
                      Terry R @Thomas 2020
                      last edited by

                      @Thomas-2020 said in RegEx problems:

                      And when there are more than 5?

                      Actually there is a regex which will work regardless of how many numbers appear on the following lines in 1 pass.
                      Using the Replace function we have:
                      Find What:(\w+$)|(\R(\d+))
                      Replace With:(?1\1\x20)(?2\3)

                      So by using “alternation” we either have a word line or a number line. Each is dealt with in a different manner. the word line is re-written with a following space (\x20) and the number line has the preceding line feed/carriage return removed.

                      There is a proviso though. As this just lumps the numbers together, once you get to 10, how do you identify each of the “separate” numbers in the group. See my example below.

                      ABC
                      1
                      2
                      3
                      4
                      5
                      ABC
                      1
                      2
                      3
                      4
                      5
                      6
                      7
                      8
                      9
                      10
                      11
                      ABC
                      1
                      2
                      3
                      ABC
                      1
                      2
                      3
                      4
                      5
                      6
                      7
                      8
                      9
                      10
                      11
                      12
                      

                      and now we have:

                      ABC 12345
                      ABC 1234567891011
                      ABC 123
                      ABC 123456789101112
                      

                      Not a pretty number sequence anymore!

                      Terry

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • Pan JanP
                        Pan Jan
                        last edited by

                        Thanks, it works great.
                        I mainly learn from examples.
                        the written explanation after translation is usually “bla” “bla” “bla”
                        I have a request to show me a specific example,
                        when is it necessary to use this (?1)
                        So far, everything works without this pattern.
                        e.g
                        (?1\1)(?2\3) -> \1\3

                        PeterJonesP Terry RT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • PeterJonesP
                          PeterJones @Pan Jan
                          last edited by PeterJones

                          @Pan-Jan said in RegEx problems:

                          when is it necessary to use this (?1)

                          That is the “conditional replacement” notation, described at https://npp-user-manual.org/docs/searching/#substitution-conditionals

                          Basically, @Terry-R’s replacement regex says

                          • (?1\1\x20) = if group1 (the \w+$ subpattern) matched, then include the contents of group1 followed by a space in the replacement
                          • (?2\3) = if group2 (the newline followed by one or more digits) matched, then include the contents of group3 (just the digits from inside group2) in the replacement

                          Your replacement \1\3 will strip out the newlines, but it will not put a space after the abc and before the 123. If that’s okay with you (even though it violates the original), then your simpler regex will work. But @Terry-R’s regex actually matches the behavior you claimed you wanted.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Pan JanP
                            Pan Jan
                            last edited by

                            Schowek01.jpg
                            Schowek02.jpg

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                            • Alan KilbornA
                              Alan Kilborn
                              last edited by

                              Posting screenshots without text describing them isn’t going to get you very far.

                              I think we need to “draw the line” and put a stop to Community members using this forum as a means to “learn regular expressions”.

                              It isn’t what this site is for.

                              Sure, asking questions about the “peculiarities” of the N++ regex engine is certainly welcome here, as are general questions of “how to transform data” by noobs that may never even heard of the regular expression concept are also welcome.

                              But to blatantly use this site as a continual Q-and-A, back-and-forth discussion of common regex concepts is, well, annoying. There are far better places for that type of discussion.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • Pan JanP
                                Pan Jan
                                last edited by

                                This post is deleted!
                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Pan JanP
                                  Pan Jan
                                  last edited by

                                  Your replacement \1\3 will strip out the newlines, but it will not put a space after the abc and before the 123.
                                  I showed there is a space between ABC and 123451012.

                                  Sure, asking questions about the “peculiarities” of the N++ regex engine is certainly welcome here
                                  I think we need to “draw the line” and put a stop to Community members using this forum as a means to “learn regular expressions”.
                                  No comment

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -2
                                  • guy038G
                                    guy038
                                    last edited by

                                    Hello, @pan-jan, @alan-kilborn, @peterjones and All,

                                    Two years ago, about, I said :

                                    By answering, for the most part, to questions, related to regular expressions, ( for years ! ), am I distorting the true purpose of this forum, which should remain, I agree, focused on the features, improvements and bugs of Notepad++ ?

                                    Refer to :

                                    https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/16509/regex-select-all-from-row-except/16


                                    So, I totally agree with Alan’s assertion ! There are plenty of sites, devoted to regex’s learning :-)) So, @pan-jan, just have a look to this FAQ :

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

                                    To my mind, one needs 2 weeks, about, to get the basics of regular expressions and, let’s say, between 1 to 3 months to fully understand all the subtleties of this pseudo-language ;-))

                                    Cheers,

                                    guy038

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                    • Pan JanP
                                      Pan Jan
                                      last edited by Pan Jan

                                      I wrote above that reading texts in a foreign language in such matters does not make sense.
                                      I know Polish and German.

                                      For me, what matters is a specific answer.
                                      Then I will analyze and verify it.
                                      If it’s okay, I’ll try to remember it.

                                      For me, the lack of a specific answer means that my version is correct.
                                      Simple logic.

                                      it works:
                                      Replace With:(?1\1\x20)(?2\3)

                                      correct:
                                      Replace With:\1\3

                                      Cheers, Thomas 2020.

                                      Chers translated into Polish means the same as: “Your health”
                                      This is what people say when they toast with a glass of vodka in their hands.

                                      Unfortunately, that’s how translators work.
                                      Maybe in 20 years it will be better.

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

                                        @Pan-Jan

                                        Ok, überzeuge mich das ich es nicht mit einem Troll zu tun habe.
                                        Was ist die Frage, was hast Du gemacht, was war das Resultat und
                                        was hättest Du erwartet?

                                        Übrigens, cheers bedeutet im englischen auch Prost,
                                        wird aber auch als Grußwort benutzt.

                                        Ok, convince me I’m not dealing with a troll.
                                        What is the question, what did you do, what was the result and
                                        what did you expect?

                                        By the way, cheers in English means Prost,
                                        but is also used as a greeting word.

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

                                          @Ekopalypse ,

                                          I don’t know that you needed to bother in this one; he seems to think he has a working expression, from what I can tell.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • Pan JanP
                                            Pan Jan
                                            last edited by Pan Jan

                                            This post is deleted!
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