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    How do i merge lines (Pt. 3)

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    • Faisal AlamF
      Faisal Alam
      last edited by

      Sorry I should’ve shared this information in the first place so it wasn’nt clear from the start. My sincere apologies, please do have a look at my current information i hope this time it is clear.
      @PeterJones @TERRY R

      What I gave in the first place:

      3040
      Woodsidi
      5202
      Sivilli Rd
      6406
      W 81 ST
      1853
      Yukon Ct
      

      Result came from @PeterJones 's Regex:

      3040 Woodsidi
      5202 Sivilli Rd
      6406 W 81 ST
      1853 Yukon Ct
      

      My actual txt:

      3040
      Woodsidi
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      5202
      Sivilli Rd
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      6406
      W 81 ST
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      1853
      Yukon Ct
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      

      Result came from @PeterJones 's Regex:

      3040 Woodsidi
      56897 246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      5202 Sivilli Rd
      56897 246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      6406 W 81 ST
      56897 246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      1853 Yukon Ct
      56897 246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      

      Result I wanted/expected:

      3040 Woodsidi
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      5202 Sivilli Rd
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      6406 W 81 ST
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      1853 Yukon Ct
      56897
      246971692
      (236) 526 2626
      

      Thank you already :)

      astrosofistaA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • astrosofistaA
        astrosofista @Faisal Alam
        last edited by

        Hi @Faisal-Alam

        As long as data provided is representative of the full text — but only you know that —, the following regex meets your needs:

        Search: \R(?![\d(])
        Replace: \x20
        

        Put the caret at the very beginning of the document, select just the Regular Expressions mode and click on Replace All.

        Have fun!

        Faisal AlamF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • Faisal AlamF
          Faisal Alam @astrosofista
          last edited by

          @astrosofista thanks man! It really worked ❤️ but i still can not use this as my txt actually comprises some other words which i am not posting here because I’m afraid people will call me childish and won’t help anymore. But this way also my work isn’t going to done. If you’re willing to help me through my work then i will post it and if not then no problem. Anyways thank you buddy you really nailed it. Sad for me i can not use this.

          astrosofistaA Alan KilbornA 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote -2
          • astrosofistaA
            astrosofista @Faisal Alam
            last edited by

            Hi @Faisal-Alam

            I see. You may want to take another approach. Can you elaborate a criterium covering all the relevant details to guide our regex efforts? For example, the criterium I used before was: Replace a LN/CR \R by a space \x20 as long as it is not followed ?=! by a number \d or an open parenthesis (.

            Have fun!

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

              @Faisal-Alam said in How do i merge lines (Pt. 3):

              Sad for me i can not use this

              Yep, sad for you.

              Also, can you stop opening a new thread each time you want to add something to this overall topic? Just reply within the thread and the site will keep all these common postings together under one heading.

              Faisal AlamF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • Faisal AlamF
                Faisal Alam @Alan Kilborn
                last edited by

                @Alan-Kilborn I’m really a newbie here, i use to make my own regex for each barrier i get but I’m unable to do this one so i came here followed by google. Anyways thanks, I’ll keep that in mind next time.

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

                  @Faisal-Alam said in How do i merge lines (Pt. 3):

                  my txt actually comprises some other words

                  I’m surprised that this statement by the OP hasn’t pushed @PeterJones over the edge… :-)

                  PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • PeterJonesP
                    PeterJones @Alan Kilborn
                    last edited by

                    @Alan-Kilborn ,

                    hasn’t pushed @PeterJones over the edge

                    Well, I just found this third topic in the discussion a minute ago, so I hadn’t gotten that far. And since other people had taken over answering, I’ll just ♫Let It Go♫

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

                      Hello, @faisal-alam, @terry-r, @peterjones, @alan-kilborn, @astrosofista and All,

                      @faisal-alam :

                      An other regex solution, which gives an output text identical to @astrosofista’one, would be :

                      SEARCH ^\d{4}\K\R

                      REPLACE \x20

                      Notes :

                      • My search regex ^\d{4}\K\R approach is to find only the lines whose the line-break must be changed as a space char :

                        • Searches from beginning ( ^ ) of line for a number with 4 digits ( \d{4} )

                        • Then the \K syntax cancelled everything that matched so far and, then, it searches for the **line break character(s) ( \R ) at the end of that specific line…

                        • Which is replaced by a space character ( \x20 )


                      • The @astrosofista’s search regex \R(?![\d(]) approach is to find a line break which is not followed with a number or bracket :

                        • Searches for line-ending characters ( \r or \n ) but ONLY IF  the look-ahead structure (?!......) is true

                        • So, IF NOT  followed with, either :

                          • A digit \d

                          • An opening bracket (

                        • Which is replaced by a space character ( \x20 )


                      If these two S/R do not give you the expected text, simply provide us some more substantial data to aim the needed text changes to perform by a regex S/R ;-))

                      Best Regards,

                      guy038

                      Faisal AlamF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • Faisal AlamF
                        Faisal Alam @guy038
                        last edited by

                        @guy038 Damn brother this worked perfectly tysm

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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