Community
    • Login

    How to see hex value of character next to cursor?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help wanted · · · – – – · · ·
    26 Posts 6 Posters 7.5k 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.
    • Blafulous CrassleyB
      Blafulous Crassley
      last edited by

      I have Notepad++ 7.5.6 on Windows 7.

      I deal with text files that come from several other apps like Excel and Quark and sometimes the text file ends up with odd characters which I need to delete or convert in Perl.

      How do I find the hex value of a character to the right of my cursor? It would be nice to see that value in the status line at the bottom of the NP++ window.

      Thanks!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • PeterJonesP
        PeterJones
        last edited by

        @Blafulous-Crassley said:

        How do I find the hex value of a character to the right of my cursor?

        Some time ago, in response to another question, @Scott-Sumner used the PythonScript plugin (*) to create a callback which will constantly show the current character’s character-code in hex and decimal.

        Using the same script, but skipping the editor callback, would allow you to do it on-demand rather than “live”.

        At one time, I had tried to start getting it to work with UTF-8 unicode characters, but I had moved on from there without remembering that I’d never finished it. Who knows, as I find time in the near future, I may go back to playing with that

        (*: If you need help installing PythonScript, see @Meta-Chuh’s Guide)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • PeterJonesP
          PeterJones
          last edited by

          @PeterJones said:

          Using the same script, but skipping the editor callback, would allow you to do it on-demand rather than “live”.

          Technically, you would have to replace the line

          editor.callback(callback_sci_UPDATEUI, [SCINTILLANOTIFICATION.UPDATEUI])
          

          with

          callback_sci_UPDATEUI(None)
          
          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • PeterJonesP
            PeterJones
            last edited by

            Okay, I’m addicted. I got it somewhat debugged. This will work up to U+FFFF as a one-shot. (Or comment out the “on-demand” line and uncomment the “editor.callback” line to get it “live”)

            # encoding=utf-8
            
            def callback_sci_UPDATEUI(args):
                c = editor.getCharAt(editor.getCurrentPos())
                if c < 1 or c > 255:
                    p = editor.getCurrentPos()
                    q = editor.positionAfter(p)
                    s = editor.getTextRange(p,q).decode('utf-8')
                    try:
                        c = ord(s)
                    except:
                        txt = "'{}' = {} char: ".format(s.encode('utf-8'), len(s))
                        for ch in s:
                            c = ord(ch)
                            txt = txt + " HEX:0x{0:04X} DEC:{0} '{1}'".format(c, unichr(c).encode('utf-8') if c not in [13, 10, 0] else 'LINE-ENDING' if c != 0 else 'END-OF-FILE')
                        notepad.setStatusBar(STATUSBARSECTION.DOCTYPE, txt)
                        return
                try:
                    info = "HEX:0x{0:04X} DEC:{0} '{1}'".format(c, unichr(c).encode('utf-8') if c not in [13, 10, 0] else 'LINE-ENDING' if c != 0 else 'END-OF-FILE')
                except ValueError:
                    info = "HEX:?? DEC:?"
                notepad.setStatusBar(STATUSBARSECTION.DOCTYPE, info)
            
            callback_sci_UPDATEUI(None)     # per https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/17799/, want on-demand
            # editor.callback(callback_sci_UPDATEUI, [SCINTILLANOTIFICATION.UPDATEUI]) # per https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/14767/, want live
            
            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • PeterJonesP
              PeterJones
              last edited by PeterJones

              Okay, I found the way to make it compatible with U+10000 and above:

              # encoding=utf-8
              
              def get_wide_ordinal(char):
                  '''https://stackoverflow.com/a/7291240/5508606'''
                  if len(char) != 2:
                      return ord(char)
                  return 0x10000 + (ord(char[0]) - 0xD800) * 0x400 + (ord(char[1]) - 0xDC00)
              
              def callback_sci_UPDATEUI(args):
                  c = editor.getCharAt(editor.getCurrentPos())
                  if c < 1 or c > 255:
                      p = editor.getCurrentPos()
                      q = editor.positionAfter(p)
                      s = editor.getTextRange(p,q).decode('utf-8')
                      c = get_wide_ordinal(s)
                  else:
                      s = unichr(c)
              
                  try:
                      info = "'{1}' = HEX:0x{0:04X} = DEC:{0} ".format(c, s.encode('utf-8') if c not in [13, 10, 0] else 'LINE-ENDING' if c != 0 else 'END-OF-FILE')
                  except ValueError:
                      info = "HEX:?? DEC:?"
                  notepad.setStatusBar(STATUSBARSECTION.DOCTYPE, info)
              
              callback_sci_UPDATEUI(None)     # per https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/17799/, want on-demand
              # editor.callback(callback_sci_UPDATEUI, [SCINTILLANOTIFICATION.UPDATEUI]) # per https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/14767/, want live
              
              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
              • Alan KilbornA
                Alan Kilborn
                last edited by

                Addicted. Definitely addicted. :)

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

                  Hello, @PeterJones, and All,

                  I’ve tried your script, on a text, containing Unicode characters over the BMP => Just perfect !

                  Just a question : In which case the END-OF-FILE string is displayed in the status bar ? I initially thought it could be when opening a new-1 empty file but not !

                  Cheers,

                  guy038

                  EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                  • EkopalypseE
                    Ekopalypse @guy038
                    last edited by

                    @guy038

                    there is no end-of-file (EOF) string/char.
                    EOF is more like a status like in reading a file.
                    If the filehandle comes to the end of a file it sets it status EOF to true
                    to inform that the end is reached.

                    Or did I misunderstand your question?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • PeterJonesP
                      PeterJones
                      last edited by

                      @guy038 said:

                      In which case the END-OF-FILE string is displayed in the status bar ?

                      In @Scott-Sumner’s original, END-OF-FILE would show if you were at the last character of the file, or if the file were empty. However, my changes to try to trap the unicode characters caused the EOF-result to give errors.

                      To fix that bug, change

                      if c < 1 or c > 255:
                      

                      to

                      if c < 0 or c > 255:
                      
                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • PeterJonesP
                        PeterJones
                        last edited by

                        @Ekopalypse said:

                        there is no end-of-file (EOF) string/char.

                        @guy038 was talking about the else 'END-OF-FILE' that should go to the status bar – ie, output of the program, not input from the file.

                        The editor.getCharAt() apparently returns 0 if the getCurrentPos() is at the end of the file. But because I introduced the bug of c<1 instead of c<0 after that line, the 0 condition in the info = ... was never hit, so my code didn’t recognized the end of the file. (It was actually printing the untrapped error to the PythonScript console, but I hadn’t seen it, because I never tried testing the end-of-file condition while making my unicode-capable version of the script.)

                        EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • EkopalypseE
                          Ekopalypse @PeterJones
                          last edited by

                          @PeterJones

                          ahh, I was looking to your code searching if there is this statement but missed that I have to scroll horizontally to see it, then I thought @guy038 was really talking about EOF status - I should have known better :-) - SORRY @guy038 and thank you Peter for clarifying.

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

                            Hello, @PeterJones, @ekopalypse, and All,

                            So, finally, using your modification :

                                if c < 0 or c > 255:
                            

                            and your line, slightly modified :

                                    info = "  {1}    0x{0:04X}  -  {0} ".format(c, s.encode('utf-8') if c not in [13, 10, 0] else 'LINE-END' if c != 0 else 'FILE-END')
                            

                            Everything is OK ! And I’ve never met the error exception :-))

                                except ValueError:
                                    info = "HEX:?? DEC:?"
                            

                            For instance :

                            • Open a new file

                            • Running the script shows |  FILE-END    0x0000  -  0', in the status bar

                            • Add a € Euro character

                            • With cursor right before the currency symbol, I get |  €    0x20AC  -  8364'

                            • With cursor right after the currency symbol, I get, again, |  FILE-END    0x0000  -  0'

                            • Now, hit the Enter key

                            • Move the caret right after the € => This time, it answers |  LINE-END    0x000D  -  13'

                            • Hit the Down arrow key. Again, we get |  FILE-END    0x0000  -  0'

                            An other example :

                            • In a new file, I added two characters, which give the same resulting glyph é !
                            é   //  LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE
                            é  //  LATIN SMALL LETTER E + DIACRITICAL COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT
                            
                            • With cursor right before the first single é character, it displays |  é    0x00E9  -  233'

                            • With cursor right before the é group of two characters, it displays |  e    0x0065  -  101'

                            • Moving the cursor rightwards 1 position, “inside” the é group of two characters, it displays |  ́    0x0301  -  769', as expected !

                            Refer to the complete list of the Combining Diacritical marks, below, for information :

                            http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0300.pdf

                            BR

                            guy038

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                            • PeterJonesP
                              PeterJones
                              last edited by

                              @Alan-Kilborn said:

                              Addicted. Definitely addicted. :)

                              I am admittedly addicted. But did you see that it helped me use Notepad++ to find a hidden character in someone else’s code? That right there justifies the time I put into it, in my opinion.

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

                                I recently found it handy to modify Peter’s script above (the version that runs “on demand”).
                                Often when dealing with a “weird” character, I want to get rid of it and replace it with something else, sometimes a different character, and sometimes a string.
                                The following modified version of the script shows the character codes (as before) but then asks you if you want to replace all occurrences of the character, and if you do, prompts you for the replacement.

                                I called it CharacterCodeShowWithOptionalReplace.py :

                                # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
                                
                                from Npp import editor, notepad
                                
                                class CCSWOR(object):
                                
                                    def get_wide_ordinal(self, char):
                                        # see https://stackoverflow.com/a/7291240/5508606
                                        if len(char) != 2: return ord(char)
                                        return 0x10000 + (ord(char[0]) - 0xD800) * 0x400 + (ord(char[1]) - 0xDC00)
                                
                                    def __init__(self):
                                
                                        c = editor.getCharAt(editor.getCurrentPos())
                                        if c < 1 or c > 255:
                                            p = editor.getCurrentPos()
                                            q = editor.positionAfter(p)
                                            s = editor.getTextRange(p,q).decode('utf-8')
                                            c = self.get_wide_ordinal(s)
                                        else:
                                            s = unichr(c)
                                
                                        try:
                                            info = "'{1}' = HEX:0x{0:04X} = DEC:{0} ".format(c, s.encode('utf-8') if c not in [13, 10, 0] else 'LINE-ENDING' if c != 0 else 'END-OF-FILE')
                                        except ValueError:
                                            info = "HEX:?? DEC:?"
                                        notepad.messageBox(info, 'Character at caret was...')
                                
                                        matches = []
                                        editor.search(s, lambda m: matches.append(m.span(0)))
                                        user_input = notepad.prompt('Replace the character with something else (all {} occurrences)?\r\n'
                                            '(Leave box empty to DELETE the character)'.format(len(matches)), 'Replace it?', '')
                                        if user_input == None: return  # Cancel
                                        editor.replace(s, user_input)
                                
                                if __name__ == '__main__': CCSWOR()
                                

                                Maybe it will be useful to someone else.
                                Perfect usage: Replace “curly double-quotes” with straight ones. :-)

                                PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                                • PeterJonesP
                                  PeterJones @Alan Kilborn
                                  last edited by

                                  @Alan-Kilborn said in How to see hex value of character next to cursor?:

                                  Perfect usage: Replace “curly double-quotes” with straight ones. :-)

                                  I wouldn’t call that “perfect”, since [“”] => " does it perfectly well without scripting. :-) Assuming you noticed they were curly in the first place.

                                  Despite that, I do think it’s a nice extension to my script. :-)

                                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                                  • Alan KilbornA
                                    Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
                                    last edited by

                                    @PeterJones

                                    I guess the “curly” thing was a bit contrived… :-)

                                    I’ll tell you my real use case of recent origin:
                                    Getting rid of some invisible LTR marks in a bunch of Skype conversation logs–ugh.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                                    • Alan KilbornA
                                      Alan Kilborn
                                      last edited by

                                      I posted an updated script for this topic, HERE.

                                      Jeff HeathJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                      • Jeff HeathJ
                                        Jeff Heath @Alan Kilborn
                                        last edited by

                                        Can someone clarify how to actually run this script? I’ve followed the installing PythonScript [Guide](link https://notepad-plus-plus.org/community/topic/17256/guide-how-to-install-the-pythonscript-plugin-on-notepad-7-6-3-7-6-4-and-above), but as I search around there are also references to installing the Python Script plug-in, but that’s not available in my version of npp (maybe because it is 64 bit?).

                                        Anyway, if I followed that PythonScript Guide, and have the plugins\PythonScript folder set up, how do I then run the script? I’ve also installed the NppExec plug-in, but don’t immediately see how that could be used.

                                        I seem to be missing something. Can anyone give me a hint?

                                        EkopalypseE PeterJonesP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • EkopalypseE
                                          Ekopalypse @Jeff Heath
                                          last edited by Ekopalypse

                                          @Jeff-Heath
                                          Once you have installed the PythonScript plugin, you should
                                          see an additional entry in the plugin menu.
                                          In that menu, there is a menu item called Show Console.
                                          Click on it, and if the console opens without reporting a problem, the installation of PS was successful.

                                          b247a11f-3f77-4997-b4dc-2fe06296f91f-image.png

                                          To create a new script, use the menu again and select New Script,
                                          But make sure the directory it points to is your ...plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\ directory.
                                          Give it a meaningful name and copy the code into it.
                                          Save it.
                                          Now it should appear in the list of the Scripts menu item.
                                          If you want it to be accessible in the PS main menu,
                                          you have to use the PS menu option Configuration…
                                          and add it to the main menu section. That’s it.
                                          Now you can run it by clicking on it or assigning a shortcut, etc.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Jeff HeathJ
                                            Jeff Heath
                                            last edited by

                                            I finally noticed in the Plugins Admin that the Python Script plugin (version 1.3) that I installed manually (with the link above) was listed under the “Incompatible” tab. But I was able to install it on the “Updates” tab to version 2. Now I have an element “Python Script” on the Plugins menu which allows me to create a new script, etc. So I think I can now try to progress and try a few more things.

                                            But why was “Python Script” not available in the Plugins Admin in the first place? All it has is “Python Indent”. I certainly don’t want to have to manually install 1.3 then do the update the next time.

                                            EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post
                                            The Community of users of the Notepad++ text editor.
                                            Powered by NodeBB | Contributors