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    • Meta ChuhM
      Meta Chuh moderator @Brigham Narins
      last edited by Meta Chuh

      hi @Brigham-Narins
      this is a very good and intriguing question. 👍

      Am I doing something wrong?

      no, you are doing everything correctly.

      apparently any notepad++ search will only begin after the bom.
      this applies to any search mode, regardless if it is a normal search within the current document, or a find in files search.

      for now i did not find any possibility to find e.g. ef bb bf (utf-8-bom) with the built in functions.
      i only found some ps, batch, python scripts that list all bom files externally, but you have probably seen them as well (stackoverflow)

      i think i/we need some more time to figure out something simple.
      (e.g. a custom batch script at the run menu, that searches all files at the path of the current active document. or a python script if you have this plugin installed)

      ps: if you are faster in implementing something like this, please share it.
      it would be an enrichment.

      Alan KilbornA Brigham NarinsB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • Alan KilbornA
        Alan Kilborn @Meta Chuh
        last edited by

        @Meta-Chuh said:

        apparently any notepad++ search will only begin after the bom

        And this seems right as BOM is meta

        Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Meta ChuhM
          Meta Chuh moderator @Alan Kilborn
          last edited by

          @Alan-Kilborn

          i am bom, i am bom ;-)

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Brigham NarinsB
            Brigham Narins @Meta Chuh
            last edited by

            Thanks @Meta-Chuh. And thanks @Alan-Kilborn. I really appreciate your interest in this.

            @Meta-Chuh said:

            i only found some ps, batch, python scripts that list all bom files externally, but you have probably seen them as well (stackoverflow)

            I did see those, yes. Ideally I’d like to come up with a solution inside Notepad++, because these outside scripts and such seem to call for expertise and programs I don’t have.

            ps: if you are faster in implementing something like this, please share it.
            it would be an enrichment.

            I’ll do my best and keep you posted, but I came to you for enrichment and enlightenment! :)

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

              @Brigham-Narins said:

              I’d like to come up with a solution inside Notepad++

              I understand why you’d want this. My earlier comment was intended to mean that I believe the BOM stuff is “consumed” when a file is opened, and thus isn’t “obtainable” later. I haven’t done any investigation, so could be totally wrong about this…

              By “inside Notepad++”, I’m sure you could write a Pythonscript that could open files in binary and detect BOM. That may or may not qualify as “inside Notepad++” and of course might be more effort than you were hoping to put in…

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

                I’m waiting for a Python program to do its work, so I started playing. Here’s a Pythonscript that does what I mentioned, operating on all files currently open within Notepad++. It seemed to work for the little bit of testing I did with it.

                for (filename, bufferID, index, view) in notepad.getFiles():
                    inf = open(filename, 'rb')
                    data_at_start_of_file = inf.read(3)
                    inf.close()
                    if len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 3 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xEF and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xBB and ord(data_at_start_of_file[2]) == 0xBF:
                        print(filename, ': found utf-8 bom')
                    elif len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 2 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xFE and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xFF:
                        print(filename, ': found ucs-2 big endian bom')
                    elif len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 2 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xFF and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xFE:
                        print(filename, ': found ucs-2 little endian bom')
                
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                • guy038G
                  guy038
                  last edited by

                  Hello, @brigham_narins, @meta-chuh, @alan-kilborn and All,

                  To simply answer your question, I would say that, among all files created from within N++, the files having a BOM ( a Byte Order Mark ) are :

                  • The files with UTF8-BOM encoding, which have a 3 bytes invisible BOM ( EF BB BF )

                  • The files with UCS-2 BE BOM encoding, which have a 2 bytes invisible BOM ( FE FF )

                  • The files with UCS-2 LE BOM encoding, which have a 2 bytes invisible BOM ( FF FE )

                  In all the other encodings, BOM does not exist !


                  Here is an other way to verify the presence of a BOM :

                  • Click on the View > Summary... menu option

                  • Calculate the difference File length (in byte) - Current document length !

                  You’ve just got the BOM length, which should be 2 or 3 bytes, depending on the file encoding

                  Best Regards,

                  guy038

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • PeterJonesP
                    PeterJones
                    last edited by

                    @Alan-Kilborn said:

                    Here’s a Pythonscript that does what I mentioned, operating on all files currently open within Notepad++.

                    Thanks for that framework. My thought process was that I wanted to see whether the scintilla buffer contained the BOM or whether it was filtered out before then. With this framework, I added some scintilla-buffer editor.xxx commands, and found that no, the BOM is not in the scintilla buffer:

                    firstBufferID = notepad.getCurrentBufferID()
                    for (filename, bufferID, index, view) in notepad.getFiles():
                        inf = open(filename, 'rb')
                        data_at_start_of_file = inf.read(3)
                        inf.close()
                        if len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 3 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xEF and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xBB and ord(data_at_start_of_file[2]) == 0xBF:
                            console.write(filename+': found utf-8 bom'+'\n')
                        elif len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 2 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xFE and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xFF:
                            console.write(filename+': found ucs-2 big endian bom'+'\n')
                        elif len(data_at_start_of_file) >= 2 and ord(data_at_start_of_file[0]) == 0xFF and ord(data_at_start_of_file[1]) == 0xFE:
                            console.write(filename+': found ucs-2 little endian bom'+'\n')
                    
                        # addendum:
                        notepad.activateBufferID( bufferID )
                        str = editor.getText()
                        console.write('buffer: length = {}\n'.format(len(str)))
                        for i in range(3):
                            console.write('\t#{}: {} => {}\n'.format(i, str[i], ord(str[i])))
                    
                    notepad.activateBufferID( firstBufferID )
                    

                    Which results in:

                    C:\Users\peter.jones\...\Peter's Scratchpad.md: found ucs-2 little endian bom
                    buffer: length = 10861
                        #0: ~ => 126
                        #1: ~ => 126
                        #2: ~ => 126
                    C:\usr\local\apps\notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\NppForumPythonScripts\17244-utf-bom-reader.py: found utf-8 bom
                    buffer: length = 1513
                        #0: # => 35
                        #1:   => 32
                        #2: e => 101
                    

                    (And no, normally my scratchpad is in UTF8-BOM, not in UCS-2 LE BOM; I just changed it’s encoding temporarily to test out the other BOM-detections.)

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

                      @PeterJones said:

                      and found that no, the BOM is not in the scintilla buffer

                      …we’re back to what I postulated in the beginning: meta!

                      Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • Meta ChuhM
                        Meta Chuh moderator @Alan Kilborn
                        last edited by

                        @Alan-Kilborn

                        …we’re back to what I postulated in the beginning: meta!

                        yes … you were calling ? ;-)

                        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • Alan KilbornA
                          Alan Kilborn @Meta Chuh
                          last edited by

                          @Meta-Chuh

                          LOL

                          Okay, that has me thinking…what does your username actually mean?

                          Meta ChuhM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Meta ChuhM
                            Meta Chuh moderator @Alan Kilborn
                            last edited by Meta Chuh

                            @Alan-Kilborn

                            it’s my real name.
                            unfortunately our family has generations of such strange names.
                            my brothers for example are called pikachuh and raichuh.

                            here’s a family picture of us:

                            Imgur

                            😄

                            seriously: i got meta as a nick name ages ago, as when i was little, i started to use anything for everything, beyond of what specific items were originally intended, or designed to be used for … and through the years, more and more of doing that actually started to work out, without anybody (including me) understanding why. 😉

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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