Community
    • Login

    Search for inconsistent line endings with a regex? (part 2)

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help wanted · · · – – – · · ·
    29 Posts 5 Posters 5.0k 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.
    • Doug HartD
      Doug Hart @Ekopalypse
      last edited by

      @Ekopalypse said in Search for inconsistent line endings with a regex? (part 2):

      regex_dict = {0:‘\r[^\n]|[^\r]\n’,
      1:‘\n’,
      2:‘\r’,}

      def check_eol(match):
      notepad.messageBox(‘Different EOLS detected’,‘EOL Missmatch’, 0)

      editor.research(regex_dict[editor.getEOLMode()], # regex
      check_eol, # function to call
      0, # re flags
      0, # start
      editor.getTextLength(), # end
      1) # count

      I know this topic is ancient, but what exactly do I do with the sample code above? Is it supposed to be an external command, a configuration file, ?

      EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • EkopalypseE
        Ekopalypse @Doug Hart
        last edited by

        @Doug-Hart

        there is a plugin called PythonScript that allows you to manipulate data in notepad++.

        Here are the steps on how to create and use it.

        The purpose of the script is to check whether the current document has different line endings (EOL), which can be problematic if you edit a file under Windows and then upload it to a Linux server, for example.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
        • guy038G
          guy038
          last edited by guy038

          Hello @ekopalypse, @alan-kilborn and All,

          @ekopalypse, I did not completely understand your script so I changed it and improved it as below :

          check = True
          
          false_EOL = {0:'$[^\r][^\n]',  # Miss the TWO chars \r\n at 'end of line' as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                       1:'\n',           # Should be \r                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 1 ( Macintosh EOL )
                       2:'\r',           # Should be \n                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 2 ( Unix      EOL )
                      }
          
          def check_eol(match):
              global check
              check = False
              notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected','EOL Mismatch', 0)
          
          editor.research(false_EOL[editor.getEOLMode()],     # regex to search for
                          check_eol,                          # function to call if regex match
                          0,                                  # re flags
                          0,                                  # START of file
                          editor.getLength(),                 # END   of file
                          1)                                  # count ( at FIRST match )
          
          if check == True:
              notepad.messageBox('All EOLS correct','EOL check', 0)
          

          Remarks :

          • I changed the word missmatch as mismatch which seems to be the right spelling !

          • I changed the name of the Python dictionnary from regex_dict to false_EOL. Thus, it emphasizes the wrong EOLS to match, in each case

          • I added a way to indicate when all the EOL are correct

          • Finally, I modified the regex used to dectect false EOLS when the file is supposed to be a Windows file

          So, I changed :

          false_EOL = {0:'\r[^\n]|[^\r]\n',   # Miss \n AFTER OR \r BEFORE as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
          

          By :

          false_EOL = {0:'$[^\r][^\n]',  # Miss the TWO chars \r\n at 'end of line' as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
          

          Because in case of huge files, the former syntax would lead to a RuntimeError regarding the regex. With the latter one, everything seems to work better !


          Now, to be sure that your file contains normalized EOLs only, simply run, consecutively, the two commands below :

          • For a Windows file :
          Edit > EOL conversion > Unix (LF)
          Edit > EOL conversion > Windows (CR LF)
          
          • For an Unix file :
          Edit > EOL conversion > Macintosh (CR)
          Edit > EOL conversion > Unix (LF)
          
          • For a Macintosh file :
          Edit > EOL conversion > Unix (LF)
          Edit > EOL conversion > Macintosh (CR)
          

          Best regards,

          guy038

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

            @guy038 said in Search for inconsistent line endings with a regex? (part 2):

            Now, to be sure that your file contains normalized EOLs only, simply run, consecutively, the two commands below

            OR… have your script do it. Add these lines into your script, after the indicated existing lines:

            def check_eol(match):                                                  # <--- existing line in script
                global check                                                       # <--- existing line in script
                check = False                                                      # <--- existing line in script
                #notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected','EOL Mismatch', 0)   # <--- existing line in script, but now turned into a comment
                line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[1])
                notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                user_input = notepad.prompt('Convert all line-endings in file?\r\nIf so, enter 0 for CRLF, 1 for CR, 2 for LF',
                    'INCONSISTENT LINE-ENDINGS DETECTED!', editor.getEOLMode())
                if user_input is not None:
                    desired_eol_index = int(user_input)
                    if 0 <= desired_eol_index <= 2:
                        eol_cmd_list = [
                            MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TODOS,
                            MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOMAC,
                            MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOUNIX,
                        ]
                        if desired_eol_index == editor.getEOLMode():
                            notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[(desired_eol_index + 1) % 3])  # change to undesired line-endings
                        notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[desired_eol_index])  # change to desired line-endings
            

            Note also that I took the liberty of adding in some logic to tell you which line number has the first inconsistent line-ending.

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

              Hello, @alan-kilborn,

              I’ll study your last solution, on Monday 18 ( Again, I’m away on a three-day ski trip 😉 )

              Best Regards,

              guy038

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

                Hello, @ekopalypse, @alan-kilborn, and All,

                Like you proposed, @alan-kilborn, the enhanced script becomes :

                check = True
                
                false_EOL = {0:'$[^\r][^\n]',  # Miss the TWO chars \r\n at 'end of line' as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                             1:'\n',           # Should be \r                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 1 ( Macintosh EOL )
                             2:'\r',           # Should be \n                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 2 ( Unix      EOL )
                            }
                
                def check_eol(match):
                    global check
                    check = False
                    line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[1])
                    notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                    user_input = notepad.prompt('Convert all line-endings in file?\r\nIf so, enter 0 for CRLF, 1 for CR, 2 for LF',
                        'INCONSISTENT LINE-ENDINGS DETECTED!', editor.getEOLMode())
                    if user_input is not None:
                        desired_eol_index = int(user_input)
                        if 0 <= desired_eol_index <= 2:
                            eol_cmd_list = [
                                MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TODOS,
                                MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOMAC,
                                MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOUNIX,
                            ]
                            if desired_eol_index == editor.getEOLMode():
                                notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[(desired_eol_index + 1) % 3])  # change to UNDESIRED line-endings
                            notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[desired_eol_index])                # change to DESIRED   line-endings
                
                editor.research(false_EOL[editor.getEOLMode()],     # regex to search for
                                check_eol,                          # function to call if regex match
                                0,                                  # re flags
                                0,                                  # START of file
                                editor.getLength(),                 # END   of file
                                1)                                  # count ( at FIRST match )
                
                if check == True:
                    notepad.messageBox('All EOLS correct','EOL check', 0)
                

                Now, given this simple text :

                This
                is
                a
                little
                test
                to   
                try
                if
                OK
                
                • With Windows (CR LF) in the status bar

                • With line 4 ending with CR

                • line 6 ending with 3 spaces + LF

                • And all the other lines ending with CRLF

                When running the script, it said :

                Different EOLS detected -- The first inconsistency is on line 6, although it should be on line 4 ending with CR !


                Still searching for other oddities :-)

                Best Regards,

                guy038

                Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Alan KilbornA
                  Alan Kilborn @guy038
                  last edited by Alan Kilborn

                  @guy038 said :

                  Different EOLS detected – The first inconsistency is on line 6, although it should be on line 4 ending with CR !

                  Well… that seems to be because $[^\r][^\n] (when searching from top of file) misses line 4 and matches the LF at the end of line 6 and the t at the start of line 7.

                  The original regex of \r[^\n]|[^\r]\n seems to work better…

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

                    I noticed that other odd things can happen.

                    Example:

                    I created a Unix (LF) file and put some lines in it, and then changed one of the line’s endings to CRLF:

                    7f90b7d9-e102-4085-b25e-5b6da0751f0a-image.png

                    The status bar said:

                    59a293bc-e6fd-48b2-8081-f8afd1617d9f-image.png

                    Running the script said:

                    04f26430-725b-4649-bec5-02d06d797169-image.png

                    but it should have said line 3.

                    Moving to the PS console window and checking the EOL mode, I discovered:

                    54577d16-e3b9-4f83-aded-accfafc391c3-image.png

                    So I seem to have found a case where something is out of sync: Notepad++ 's status bar says LF for line-endings, but the Scintilla buffer says something different (CRLF).

                    EDIT: I seem to have figured out why: The editorconfig plugin seems to be interfering. I have it set for CRLF for the file in question. However, I’d have thought that this plugin only does things when I save a file, and in the above I’ve not saved the data. Oh, well, (non)problem solved.

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

                      This time I’ve found a real bug in the script, and it is with the code I suggested:

                      Buggy code:

                          line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[1])
                          notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                      

                      Better code:

                          line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[0])
                          notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch + 1),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                      
                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • guy038G
                        guy038
                        last edited by guy038

                        Hello, @ekopalypse, @alan-kilborn and All,

                        Ah…, OK. I see the problem ! Now, Alan, if you try this script on files with more than 500,000 lines, the regex \r[^\n]|[^\r]\n return an error whereas the regex $[^\r][^\n] works correctly and displays the expected message All EOLS correct


                        Thus, I decided that this behaviour is of higher importance compared to knowing which is the first mismatched line found ! I, then, changed this script as below :

                        check = True
                        
                        false_EOL = {0:'$[^\r][^\n]',  # Miss the TWO chars \r\n at 'end of line' as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                                     1:'\n',           # Should be \r                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 1 ( Macintosh EOL )
                                     2:'\r',           # Should be \n                             as editor.getEOLMode() = 2 ( Unix      EOL )
                                    }
                        
                        def check_eol(match):
                            global check
                            check = False
                            user_input = notepad.prompt('Convert ALL line-endings of CURRENT file ( 0 for CRLF, 1 for CR, 2 for LF )',
                                'INCONSISTENT line-endings DETECTED !', editor.getEOLMode())
                            if user_input is not None:
                                desired_eol_index = int(user_input)
                                if 0 <= desired_eol_index <= 2:
                                    eol_cmd_list = [
                                        MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TODOS,
                                        MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOMAC,
                                        MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOUNIX,
                                    ]
                                    if desired_eol_index == editor.getEOLMode():
                                        notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[(desired_eol_index + 1) % 3])  # change to UNDESIRED line-endings
                                    notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[desired_eol_index])                # change to DESIRED   line-endings
                        
                        editor.research(false_EOL[editor.getEOLMode()],     # regex to search for
                                        check_eol,                          # function to call if regex match
                                        0,                                  # re flags
                                        0,                                  # START of file
                                        editor.getLength(),                 # END   of file
                                        1)                                  # count ( at FIRST match )
                        
                        if check == True:
                            notepad.messageBox('All EOLS correct','EOL check', 0)
                        

                        Do note that it’s my own preference, only !

                        Best Regards,

                        guy038

                        P.S. :

                        In the meantime, I saw that you"ve done testing a lot ! Thanks for your tests but, as you can see, I solved the problem definitively ;-))

                        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Alan KilbornA
                          Alan Kilborn @guy038
                          last edited by Alan Kilborn

                          @guy038 said :

                          whereas the regex $[^\r][^\n] works correctly

                          Try it on a Windows (CR LF) file and this data:

                          d0d694b4-e64f-4497-897d-176f5009356d-image.png

                          That regex doesn’t hit anything in that text.


                          I solved the problem definitively

                          Hmm. :-)

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

                            Hi, @ekopalypse, @alan-kilborn and All,

                            I deeply apologize, because my regex to find out all wrong cases, in case of a Windows file, was itself bugged !

                            You were right about it, Alan. The correct regex is $\n|\r^ leading to the line :

                            false_EOL = {0:'$\n|\r^',  # Find \n AFTER end of line OR \r BEFORE beginning of line as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                            

                            This time, results are coherent, even for large files !

                            BR

                            guy038

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

                              Hello, @ekopalypse, @alan-kilborn and All,

                              I did some additional tests, with your modifications, Alan :

                                  line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[0])
                                  notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch + 1),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                              

                              and my own one :

                              false_EOL = {0:'$\n|\r^',  # Find \n AFTER end of line OR \r BEFORE beginning of line as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                              

                              And everything seems to work as expected !

                              So the final version of this script is :

                              check = True
                              
                              false_EOL = {0:'$\n|\r^',  # Find \n AFTER end of line OR \r BEFORE beginning of line as editor.getEOLMode() = 0 ( Windows   EOL )
                                           1:'\n',       # Find \n ( should be \r )                                 as editor.getEOLMode() = 1 ( Macintosh EOL )
                                           2:'\r',       # Find \r ( should be \n )                                 as editor.getEOLMode() = 2 ( Unix      EOL )
                                          }
                              
                              def check_eol(match):
                                  global check
                                  check = False
                                  line_of_first_mismatch = editor.lineFromPosition(match.span(0)[0])
                                  notepad.messageBox('Different EOLS detected -- the first inconsistency is on line ' + str(line_of_first_mismatch + 1),'EOL Mismatch', 0)
                                  user_input = notepad.prompt('Convert ALL line-endings of CURRENT file ( 0 for CRLF, 1 for CR, 2 for LF )',
                                      'INCONSISTENT line-endings DETECTED !', editor.getEOLMode())
                                  if user_input is not None:
                                      desired_eol_index = int(user_input)
                                      if 0 <= desired_eol_index <= 2:
                                          eol_cmd_list = [
                                              MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TODOS,
                                              MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOMAC,
                                              MENUCOMMAND.FORMAT_TOUNIX,
                                          ]
                                          if desired_eol_index == editor.getEOLMode():
                                              notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[(desired_eol_index + 1) % 3])  # change to UNDESIRED line-endings
                                          notepad.menuCommand(eol_cmd_list[desired_eol_index])                # change to DESIRED   line-endings
                              
                              editor.research(false_EOL[editor.getEOLMode()],     # regex to search for
                                              check_eol,                          # function to call if regex match
                                              0,                                  # re flags
                                              0,                                  # START of file
                                              editor.getLength(),                 # END   of file
                                              1)                                  # count ( at FIRST match )
                              
                              if check == True:
                                  notepad.messageBox('All EOLS correct','EOL check', 0)
                              

                              To be rigorous, note that the first EOL inconsistency is always the first line with line-ending chars(s) different from the status bar indication !

                              Best Regards,

                              guy038

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • First post
                                Last post
                              The Community of users of the Notepad++ text editor.
                              Powered by NodeBB | Contributors