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    • Anthony NoriegaA
      Anthony Noriega
      last edited by

      Could someone help me with a Find and remove function. I want to find words that are enclose by: /.keyword./

      and remove everything else around it.
      there are 15,000 lines and this /.keyword./ may show multiple times in one line. All I want are the keywords between this /.* .*/

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

        @Anthony-Noriega

        There’s probably a way to do what you need, but your need isn’t very clear. I see “italics” in your data which means that you’ve probably used a * in composing your post, but it was consumed by the site thinking that it was markup.

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

          I’m not one for guessing at people’s problem statement, but to show the general technique, let’s say that the data you want to keep is inside pairs of /.

          So, some data:

          After a weekend of emotional honesty at an Esalen-style retreat, Los Angeles
          sophisticates /Bob/ and /Carol/ Sanders (Robert Culp and Natalie Wood) return
          home determined to embrace complete openness. They share their enthusiasm
          and excitement over their new-found philosophy with their more conservative
          friends Ted and Alice Henderson (/Elliott/ Gould and Dyan Cannon), who remain
          doubtful. Soon after, filmmaker Bob has an affair with a young production
          assistant on a film shoot in San Francisco. When he gets home he admits his
          liaison to Carol, describing the event as a purely physical act, not an
          emotional one. To Bob's surprise, Carol is completely accepting of his
          extramarital behavior. Later, Carol gleefully reveals the affair to /Ted/ and
          /Alice/ as they are leaving a dinner party. Disturbed by Bob's infidelity and
          Carol's candor, Alice becomes physically ill on the drive home. She and Ted
          have a difficult time coping with the news in bed that night. But as time
          passes they grow to accept that Bob and Carol really are fine with the
          affair. Later, Ted admits to Bob that he was tempted to have an affair once,
          but didn't go through with it; Bob tells Ted he should, rationalizing:
          "You've got the guilt anyway. /Don't waste it/."
          

          and a replacement,

          find: (?s).*?/(?-s)(.*?)/|(?s).*\z
          repl: ?1${1}\r\n
          (regular expression search mode)

          will yield:

          Bob
          Carol
          Elliott
          Ted
          Alice
          Don't waste it
          

          This technique has its roots in THIS THREAD.

          Anthony NoriegaA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • Anthony NoriegaA
            Anthony Noriega @Alan Kilborn
            last edited by

            @Alan-Kilborn You were correct, the asterisk/star was consumed by the formatter. The pattern is: slash dot star exampleKeyword dot star slash
            Essentially I only want the keyword in between that pattern and delete everything else.

            Alan KilbornA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Alan KilbornA
              Alan Kilborn @Anthony Noriega
              last edited by Alan Kilborn

              @Anthony-Noriega

              So I’ll show it because you apparently can’t:

              /.*mykeyword*./

              :-)

              Please confirm that is correct.
              Can you make the adjustments to what I’ve already shown as an example, to make it work?
              It might be tricky…

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • Alan KilbornA
                Alan Kilborn @Anthony Noriega
                last edited by Alan Kilborn

                @Anthony-Noriega

                Well, it really is a bit tricky. :-)

                If we change my earlier text to this (which is more of what I think you have):

                After a weekend of emotional honesty at an Esalen-style retreat, Los Angeles
                sophisticates /.*Bob*./ and /.*Carol*./ Sanders (Robert Culp and Natalie Wood) return
                home determined to embrace complete openness. They share their enthusiasm
                and excitement over their new-found philosophy with their more conservative
                friends Ted and Alice Henderson (/.*Elliott*./ Gould and Dyan Cannon), who remain
                doubtful. Soon after, filmmaker Bob has an affair with a young production
                assistant on a film shoot in San Francisco. When he gets home he admits his
                liaison to Carol, describing the event as a purely physical act, not an
                emotional one. To Bob's surprise, Carol is completely accepting of his
                extramarital behavior. Later, Carol gleefully reveals the affair to /.*Ted*./ and
                /.*Alice*./ as they are leaving a dinner party. Disturbed by Bob's infidelity and
                Carol's candor, Alice becomes physically ill on the drive home. She and Ted
                have a difficult time coping with the news in bed that night. But as time
                passes they grow to accept that Bob and Carol really are fine with the
                affair. Later, Ted admits to Bob that he was tempted to have an affair once,
                but didn't go through with it; Bob tells Ted he should, rationalizing:
                "You've got the guilt anyway. /.*Don't waste it*./."
                

                If we then try this replacement:

                find: (?s).*?/\Q.*\E((?-s).*?)\Q*.\E/|(?s).*\z
                repl: ?1${1}\r\n
                (regular expression search mode)

                We’ll (again) obtain:

                Bob
                Carol
                Elliott
                Ted
                Alice
                Don't waste it
                

                I used the \Q and \E constructs to avoid leaning-toothpick-syndrome, somewhat.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • Anthony NoriegaA
                  Anthony Noriega
                  last edited by

                  @Alan-Kilborn said in Find and remove everything else:

                  ?1${1}\r\n

                  Close, but the pattern you have is off…on the end, you hvae the star next to the keyword, and it should be the dot as my example.

                  /.*mykeyword*./
                  

                  It should be:

                  /.*mykeyword.*/
                  
                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Terry RT
                    Terry R
                    last edited by Terry R

                    @Anthony-Noriega said in Find and remove everything else:

                    Close, but the pattern you have is off…on the end

                    My solution was:
                    Find What:(?s)\G/\.\*([^.]+)\.\*/|.+?(?=\z|/\.\*)
                    Replace With:?1\1\r\n
                    again a regular expression so search mode is regular expression.

                    Where (again) leaning toothpicks are all around.

                    Cheers
                    Terry

                    PS I should add there will likely be a last empty line, just a side effect of how the regex works. Should be easy enough to remove that afterwards.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • Anthony NoriegaA
                      Anthony Noriega
                      last edited by

                      @Terry-R said in Find and remove everything else:

                      (?s)\G/.*([^.]+).*/|.+?(?=\z|/.*)
                      That fixed it, thank you all for your help.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Alan KilbornA
                        Alan Kilborn @Anthony Noriega
                        last edited by Alan Kilborn

                        @Anthony-Noriega said in Find and remove everything else:

                        Close, but the pattern you have is off…

                        Yes, my bad on that. :-(

                        Too bad we couldn’t have seen this from the very beginning:
                        Imgur

                        Anthony NoriegaA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Anthony NoriegaA
                          Anthony Noriega @Alan Kilborn
                          last edited by

                          @Alan-Kilborn Rookie mistake… i didnt realize the formatter was gonna make me look like a bonehead.

                          Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Alan KilbornA
                            Alan Kilborn @Anthony Noriega
                            last edited by Alan Kilborn

                            @Anthony-Noriega said in Find and remove everything else:

                            look like a bonehead.

                            No worries.
                            We see that kind of thing CONSTANTLY here!
                            :-)
                            The important part is we are marking your problem SOLVED!

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

                              Hello, @Anthony-Noriega, @alan-kilborn, @terry-r and All,

                              I know, I’m a bit late :-) Here is my solution !

                              Assuming that the exact syntax is :

                              /.*keyword.*/
                              

                              SEARCH (?s).+?/\.\*(.+?)\.\*/|.+

                              REPLACE ?1\1\r\n

                              Notes :

                              • First, the (?s) syntax means that the regex . char will match any single character, even an EOL one

                              • Then , in two parts of the search expression, the regex syntax .+? represents the shortest non-null range of characters till, either, the strings /.* or .*/

                              • Because of the regex symbols * and ., these characters must be escaped with an slash, so the form \.\*

                              • As the second .+? syntax is embedded between parentheses, the second range of chars ( each keyword ) is stored as group 1

                              • Finally , then no more keyword exists, the second alternative .+ looks for the greatest non-null range of characters till… the very end of file

                              • In replacement, the conditional structure ?1\1\r\n means that if the group 1 exists, it is rewritten \1, followed with a line break \r\n. When the second alternative of the search occurs, no group is involved. So nothing occurs, and the last range of text, after the last keyword, is simply deleted

                              Best Regards,

                              guy038

                              Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Alan KilbornA
                                Alan Kilborn @guy038
                                last edited by

                                @guy038

                                But really, Guy, there isn’t anything new here over what you posted HERE – with the removal of the ^ as discussed a bit later in that thread – it’s just an application of the other posting’s idea to slightly different data.

                                We probably should stop solving the specific problems and just point people to the already-derived general solutions.

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

                                  Hi, @lan-kilborn,

                                  Yes, I agree that it looks like a redundant piece of information ! In fact, I was thinking to this old post, where I proposed a general method, for isolating literal strings or expressions matched by a given regex, rewritten on different lines :

                                  https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/12710/marked-text-manipulation/8

                                  That’s the reason why, in my previous post, I preferred to focus on the regexes’s explanations, thinking it could be useful to the OP, anyway !

                                  But, Alan, you’re right : my post wasn’t really needed ;-))

                                  Cheers,

                                  guy038

                                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • Alan KilbornA
                                    Alan Kilborn @guy038
                                    last edited by

                                    @guy038

                                    I had a further thought:

                                    The thread I linked to earlier, and referred to in my post just above is entitled “Marked Text Manipulation”.

                                    That relates to the current thread because a typical desire after marking some text is to copy only that text to another location, which is very similar to the topic of this “Find and remove everything else” thread.
                                    In both cases you obtain the same effective result.

                                    The new thought is that, at the time of the “Marked Text Manipulation” thread’s main discussion, there was no way to copy marked text without resorting to scripting. Now (7.9.1-ish) there is:

                                    1f6bdae9-f91c-4b07-bfb6-5afebec8922b-image.png

                                    Just press the indicated button after you already have marked some text.

                                    I will put a similar not in that other thread as well.

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

                                      Hi, @anthony-noriega, @alan-kilborn, @terry-r and All,

                                      Oh, yes, Alan. You’re right ! Of course, I already downloaded the portable v7.9.1 version but I’m still “stuck” with the v7.8.5 version which explains why I didn"t notice this recent enhancement !

                                      So, thanks to @scott-sumner, we just have to use the (?-s)/\.\*\K(.+?)(?=\.\*/) regex, click on the Mark All button to get all the keywords and, then, click on the Copy Marked Text button and paste the results on a new document. Nice !

                                      BR

                                      guy038

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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