Community
    • Login

    Ignoring empty lines counting

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help wanted · · · – – – · · ·
    24 Posts 9 Posters 5.4k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Mark OlsonM
      Mark Olson @madara san
      last edited by

      @madara-san
      I appreciate your (apparent?) desire to help people, but using generative AI is not the way to do this. StackOverflow has banned people from using ChatGPT, and for good reason.

      For example:

      For example, in Notepad++, you can go to “View” > “Summary” to see a summary of the document, including the number of lines with and without blank lines.
      

      This is false, the View->Summary tab does not include information on how many lines are empty.

      Use a regular expression (regex) to match and replace the blank lines. In most text editors, you can use the find and replace function and search for the regex pattern “^$” (which matches an empty line) and replace it with nothing.
      

      This is almost helpful, except that a quick attempt to actually do the thing you suggested reveals that while the find/replace form finds empty lines, the count feature does not count them. Also, the user doesn’t want to replace empty lines.

      Honestly I don’t know why I waste my breath. I’d strongly urge the forum mods to ban this user if they don’t stop wasting people’s time with uncurated crud out of ChatGPT.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 6
      • Mark OlsonM
        Mark Olson
        last edited by

        While I’m here, here’s a no-plugin way to get the answer (indirectly):

        1. Go to Find/replace form.
        2. Count the occurrences of the following regex: ^\h*\S+\h*$.
        • This is the number of lines that don’t have only whitespace.
        • You can then subtract this number from the number of lines in the document, and that’s how many empty or whitespace-only lines you have.

        TBH I think it’s pretty weird that the Count feature doesn’t count empty matches, and this could arguably be considered a bug.

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

          @Mark-Olson said in Ignoring empty lines counting:

          I think it’s pretty weird that the Count feature doesn’t count empty matches, and this could arguably be considered a bug.

          Mark All also won’t do matches of zero-length (e.g. assert-only matches like ^$), but this perhaps is more understandable since there is no text to “mark”.

          Were you going to open a bug report issue about Count?

          Mark OlsonM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • Mark OlsonM
            Mark Olson @Alan Kilborn
            last edited by

            @Alan-Kilborn
            Not sure if I want to open a bug report, because I can see why this could be considered intended behavior.

            I may open one later today.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • Mark OlsonM
              Mark Olson @Alan Kilborn
              last edited by

              @Alan-Kilborn
              Actually, I came up with a good solution to the issue of Count not counting empty matches.
              Show something like 20 matches (including 10 empty matches)

              I’ll create an issue if you haven’t already, and then I’ll start on a PR.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • guy038G
                guy038
                last edited by guy038

                Hello, @mark-olson, @alan-kilborn and All,

                Regarding counting of lines, here are my solutions !


                • First, insert this dummy text, below, in a new N++ tab
                This
                is
                
                
                
                a
                
                small
                test
                to
                			
                      
                
                see if
                      this       test   
                			is		OK		
                That's the
                END
                
                • Open the Find dialog ( Ctrl + F )

                • Unchek all box options

                • Check the Wrap around option

                • Click on the Count button or use the Alt + T shortcut for all the examples below


                
                So, for one hand :
                
                
                    ^\R          count ALL lines with NO character ( True EMPTY lines )    =>     5 lines
                
                 +
                
                    ^\h+$        count ALL lines with horizontal BLANK characters ONLY     =>     2 lines
                
                 =
                
                    ^\h*\R       count ALL lines WITHOUT any NON-SPACE character           =>     7 lines
                
                 +
                
                    (?-s)\S.*    count ALL lines with, at LEAST, 1 NON-SPACE character     =>    11 lines    ( as well as  (?-s).*\S )
                
                 =
                
                    (?-s).*\R    count ALL lines                                           =>    18 lines
                
                
                
                And for the other hand :
                
                
                    ^\R           count ALL lines with NO character ( True EMPTY lines )    =>    5 lines
                
                 +
                
                    (?-s).*       count ALL lines with, at LEAST, 1 character               =>   13 lines 
                
                 =
                
                    (?-s).*\R     count ALL lines                                           =>   18 lines
                
                

                Notes :

                • Just repeat the counting , using the Mark dialog, to better identify the class of the counted lines !

                • Of course, you may use a normal selection of text and check the in selection option to restrict the counting to that selection

                Best Regards,

                guy038

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

                  I’ll create an issue if you haven’t already…

                  The issue that was opened:

                  https://github.com/notepad-plus-plus/notepad-plus-plus/issues/13608

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                  • guy038G
                    guy038
                    last edited by guy038

                    Hi, @mark-olson, @alan-kilborn and All,

                    Did you notice this fact :

                    • The regex ^$, indeed, does not count true empty lines !

                    but :

                    • The regex ^\R does count empty lines !!

                    BR

                    guy038

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

                      @guy038 said in Ignoring empty lines counting:

                      The regex ^$, indeed, does not count true empty lines !

                      but :

                      The regex ^\R does count empty lines !!

                      If the regex is purely an assertion, e.g. ^$ or \b (to name but two), then its match won’t be counted by Count.

                      CoisesC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                      • CoisesC
                        Coises @Alan Kilborn
                        last edited by

                        @Alan-Kilborn said in Ignoring empty lines counting:

                        @guy038 said in Ignoring empty lines counting:

                        The regex ^$, indeed, does not count true empty lines !

                        but :

                        The regex ^\R does count empty lines !!

                        If the regex is purely an assertion, e.g. ^$ or \b (to name but two), then its match won’t be counted by Count.

                        True (since a pure assertion is always an empty match), but empty matches aren’t counted regardless of how the regular expression is specified. In a file that has empty lines, but no lines containing only capital Ws, ^W*$ counts zero matches. ^\R counts all empty lines (except the last line, if it’s empty) because it isn’t an empty match: it matches line ending characters. ^.*$ and ^.+$ both count all lines that are not empty.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • First post
                          Last post
                        The Community of users of the Notepad++ text editor.
                        Powered by NodeBB | Contributors