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    • CletosC
      Cletos
      last edited by

      @Alan-Kilborn said in Remove duplicate lines not possible?:

      It is a tough problem to solve with Notepad++ alone

      There once was such option to remove spread duplicates, if I remember it right.

      sometimes the techniques to do it work, sometimes they don’t. It is data-dependent

      Yes, I understand. But why replace an option doing both (spread and following lines) with one doing only one of them.

      So it is not possible with Notepad at the moment.

      Many thanks!

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

        @Cletos said in Remove duplicate lines not possible?:

        There once was such option to remove spread duplicates, if I remember it right.

        No, only a way to do it via regular expressions discussed here on the Community – that’s probably what you remember.

        So it is not possible with Notepad++ at the moment.

        Well, you can try it with the regular expression technique; search the Community site and you’ll rediscover the links with instructions.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • CletosC
          Cletos
          last edited by

          Alright, thank you very much!

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

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

            Alan, as you know, I’ve certainly answered this question, many times ! But, I’m a bit lazy and, instead of finding the different links, for the OP, I prefer to “re-invent the wheel” ;-))

            So @cletos, here is the magic regular expression S/R, which deletes all duplicates lines, without changing the order of the lines

            • SEARCH (?-s)^(.+\R)(?=(?s:.*)^\1)

            • REPLACE Leave EMPTY

            • Tick the Match case option, if you prefer a case detection

            • Tick the Wrap around option, preferably

            • Select the Regular expression search mode

            • Click on the Replace All button ( or use the “step by step”  Replace button to verify how the regex works ! )

            Remark :

            Let’s suppose that your initial text is :

            aaa
            bbb
            ccc
            ddd
            bbb
            bbb
            eee
            fff
            bbb
            ggg
            bbb
            hhh
            iii
            

            Then this regex S/R will delete :

            • The bbb line between lines aaa and ccc
            • The bbb line between lines ddd and bbb
            • The bbb line between lines bbb and eee
            • The bbb line between lines fff and ggg

            And keeps, only the line bbb, located between lines ggg and hhh

            So, to sum up, this regex S/R keep all the last duplicate lines found, in the input text !

            So your final text becomes :

            aaa
            ccc
            ddd
            eee
            fff
            ggg
            bbb
            hhh
            iii
            

            I cannot get an other layout, with a correct regex S/R ! ( For instance, keeping the line bbb between lines aaa and ccc and deleting all subsequent bbb lines ) Sorry for this limitation !


            IMPORTANT :

            • The last line of your list must always be followed with a line-break

            • Be aware that the behaviour of this regex S/R is rather weird ! It works nice with small or middle-size text to process. But :

              • If your file has a big size, over 10 Mb about, even not concerned with duplicates lines, OR

              • If 2 duplicate lines are separated with, let’s say, more than 10,000 lines

            It may happen that this S/R is completely wrong, with an extra occurrence, matching all the file contents :-(( It mainly depends on our Boost regex engine and, probably, on the amount of your system memory !

            As always, give it a try, with your real files, to see how this regex S/R acts !?


            Two possible solutions, if any problem occurs :

            • Use, the Replace button repeatedly ( or the Alt + R shortcut ) and stop when a particular replacement wipe out, wrongly, all file contents !

            • Split your text in smaller parts, processing this regex S/R on each part, first. Then, merge all the pieces and process, again, the regex S/R on the whole set !

            Best Regards,

            guy038

            SofistanppS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • CletosC
              Cletos
              last edited by

              Hello guy038,

              Thank you very much!

              I cannot get an other layout, with a correct regex S/R ! ( For instance, keeping the line bbb between lines aaa and ccc and deleting all subsequent bbb lines ) Sorry for this limitation !
              No, no, it works great!

              The last line of your list must always be followed with a line-break

              So one has to just press ENTER at the end of that last line in the txt file.

              If your file has a big size, over 10 Mb about, even not concerned with duplicates lines, OR

              So I could try splitting the processing on the first half of the txt file and the last half or even smaller and hope there are many lines removed and the file gets smaller.

              Be aware that the behaviour of this regex S/R is rather weird ! It works nice with small or middle-size text to process. But :

              Works great after some testing.

              Two possible solutions, if any problem occurs :

              Use, the Replace button repeatedly ( or the Alt + R shortcut ) and stop when a particular replacement wipe out, wrongly, all file contents !
              
              Split your text in smaller parts, processing this regex S/R on each part, first. Then, merge all the pieces and process, again, the regex S/R on the whole set !
              

              I will try it like that.

              Thank you very much, again!

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • SofistanppS
                Sofistanpp @guy038
                last edited by

                @guy038 said in Remove duplicate lines not possible?:

                I cannot get an other layout, with a correct regex S/R ! ( For instance, keeping the line bbb between lines aaa and ccc and deleting all subsequent bbb lines ) Sorry for this limitation !

                Hi guy038, Cletos, All:

                Not a regex solution, but if you reverse the list —for example, by means of the Reverse Lines plugin— and run the nice regex you provided, you will get the first “bbb” with all duplicates being deleted. Once you are finished, reverse the list again to get the original order of lines.

                Hope you find this, my first post here, useful.

                Best Regards.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • CletosC
                  Cletos
                  last edited by

                  Hello Sofistanpp,

                  OK, sounds very good! Many thanks!

                  SofistanppS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • SofistanppS
                    Sofistanpp @Cletos
                    last edited by

                    @Cletos Glad to be of help.

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

                      @Sofistanpp

                      Maybe explain how reversing the lines helps?

                      SofistanppS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • SofistanppS
                        Sofistanpp @Alan Kilborn
                        last edited by

                        @Alan-Kilborn Sure. It looks to overcome a limitation pointed out by guy038, who wrote that the regex he posted remove all the duplicates except the last one, but it seems that he wanted to keep the first one. So if you reverse the order of lines and run the regex, you will remove, of course, all the instances except the last duplicate — now reverse the list back to the original order and you would have actually kept the first instance of the line —the “bbb” between “aaa” and “ccc” of the example.

                        Hope it is clear now (English is not my first language).

                        Best Regards.

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

                          @Sofistanpp

                          Ah, okay, I missed the point about wanting to keep the first rather than the last. Thanks for the clarification.

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

                            Hi, @cletos, @sofistanpp, @alan-kilborn and All,

                            @sofistanpp, I didn’t want to privilege any solution but, indeed, it’s good to be able to chose, with your clever idea of using the Reverse Lines plugin, between these two solutions :

                            • Keep the first duplicate line and delete all subsequent duplicate lines

                            • Delete any duplicate but just keep the last duplicate line

                            Now, thinking about it, I found out a solution which can be processed within N++ only, preventing from using any external tool


                            If we go back to my previous example, open the Column editor ( Edit > Column Editor... ) and, moving the caret to the first column of the first line of your text, create a new number’s list ( Don’t forget to tick the Leading zeros option ! )

                            Then after adding 1 or several blank character(s), after each number, with the column mode selection, you should get :

                            
                            01 aaa
                            02 bbb
                            03 ccc
                            04 ddd
                            05 bbb
                            06 bbb
                            07 eee
                            08 fff
                            09 bbb
                            10 ggg
                            11 bbb
                            12 hhh
                            13 iii
                            

                            Now, sort the lines with the option Edit > Line Operations > Sort Lines Lexicographically Descending, giving :

                            13 iii
                            12 hhh
                            11 bbb
                            10 ggg
                            09 bbb
                            08 fff
                            07 eee
                            06 bbb
                            05 bbb
                            04 ddd
                            03 ccc
                            02 bbb
                            01 aaa
                            

                            Finally, after running this new version of my previous regex S/R :

                            • SEARCH (?-s)^\d+\h+(.+\R)(?=(?s:.*)^\d+\h+\1)

                            • REPLACE Leave EMPTY

                            You’re left with :

                            13 iii
                            12 hhh
                            10 ggg
                            08 fff
                            07 eee
                            04 ddd
                            03 ccc
                            02 bbb
                            01 aaa
                            

                            Finally, after the second sort Edit > Line Operations > Sort Lines Lexicographically Ascending, in the reverse order, we have the following output text :

                            01 aaa
                            02 bbb
                            03 ccc
                            04 ddd
                            07 eee
                            08 fff
                            10 ggg
                            12 hhh
                            13 iii
                            

                            As expected, it remains the duplicate bbb line between lines aaa and ccc only ;-))

                            Best Regards,

                            guy038

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • SofistanppS
                              Sofistanpp
                              last edited by

                              Hi guy038, All:

                              Well done. I’m glad my post somehow inspired you to develop a more comprehensive solution to the current issue. As I learned reading archived posts, ancillary lists are a frequently used resource of your toolbox.

                              On my side, reversing lines wasn’t my first thought. What would happen, I asked myself, if I run that regex in backward direction from the last line? Would I get, by symmetry, the first “bbb”? Enabled the Backward direction button via an AutoHotkey script and clicked on Replace All, but no joy. You will get exactly the same outcome as if you run the regex in normal direction.

                              I suspect that lookarounds are the culprits (simpler regexes do the expected job), but haven’t thoroughly tested it.

                              Maybe you or someone else can elaborate on this issue.

                              Best Regards.

                              Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • CletosC
                                Cletos
                                last edited by

                                Hello guy038,

                                Thank you you very much for the new method!

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

                                  @Sofistanpp

                                  run that regex in backward direction from the last line

                                  Searching backwards with regex is “discouraged” and is partially disabled in Notepad++.
                                  The reason, I think, is that thru a given text, if you search backwards versus forwards, you won’t get the same hits. Sometimes (simpler regexes, as you noted) you will, but not always (depends upon the regex and maybe the data).

                                  Enabled the Backward direction button via an AutoHotkey script

                                  In general, enabling disabled controls and then performing an operation and expecting good results is a dubious premise.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • endolithE
                                    endolith @Cletos
                                    last edited by endolith

                                    @Cletos Yes this feature is buggy, I see it fairly often. Usually I can click “Remove duplicate lines” and it removes them all, regardless of order, but sometimes it doesn’t remove any of them. Something wrong with the software, but I can’t pinpoint what’s wrong. It depends on the text? Or I have to create a new blank document and then it works there, and then copy it back into the original?

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

                                      @endolith said in Remove duplicate lines not possible?:

                                      It depends on the text?

                                      Could be a line-ending problem?
                                      If line-endings are different on otherwise duplicate lines, they won’t be considered true duplicates.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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