I have a multiline string (from a txt-file using ReadAllText).
the string looks like this:
R;0035709310000026542510X0715;;;
R;0035709310000045094410P1245;;;
R;0035709310000026502910Z1153;;;
I want to put in a ";" in each line on place 22, so it looks like this:
R;00357093100000265425;10X0715;;;
R;00357093100000450944;10P1245;;;
R;00357093100000265029;10Z1153;;;
The multiline string always contain the samme amount of data but not always 3 lines - sometimes more lines.
How do I make this? Please show some code.
Thanks alot :-)
Best regards
Bent
Try this ...
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
var lines = File.ReadAllLines("data.txt");
var results = lines.Select(x => x.Insert(22, ";"));
Step 1, don't use ReadAllText(). Use ReadAllLines() instead.
string[] myLinesArray = File.ReadAllLines(...);
Step 2, replace all lines (strings) with the changed version.
for(int i = 0; i < myLinesArray.Length; i++)
myLinesArray[i] = myLinesArray[i].Insert(22, ";");
Step 3, Use WriteAllLines()
try this
string s ="R;0035709310000026542510X0715;;;";
s = s.Insert(22,";");
Console.Write(s);
or use Regex
string s =#"R;0035709310000026542510X0715;;;
R;0035709310000045094410P1245;;;
R;0035709310000026502910Z1153;;;";
string resultString = Regex.Replace(s, "^.{22}", "$0;", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Multiline);
Console.Write(resultString);
I think it would be better to read the source file line by line and modify the line as you go.
You could build up your new file in a StringBuilder or, if is large,
write it to a new file, used to replace the source at the end.
Something like this,
using System.IO;
string tempFileName = Path.GetTempFileName();
using (StreamWriter target = File.CreateText(tempFileName))
{
using(StreamReader source = file.OpenText("YourSourceFile.???"))
{
while (source.Peek() >= 0)
{
target.WriteLine(source.ReadLine().Insert(22, ";"));
}
}
}
File.Delete("YourSourceFile.???");
File.Move(tempFileName, "YourSourceFile.???");
This approach becomes is especially appropriate for large files since it avoids loading all the data into memory at once but the performance will be good for all but very large files or, I guess, if the lines were very (very) long.
As suggested, you can use the Insert method to achieve your goal.
If your file contains a lot of lines and you need to work on 1 line at a time, you might also consider reading it line by line from a TextReader.
You could go with Regex:
myString = Regex.Replace(myString, #"(^.{22})", #"\1;", RegexOptions.Multiline);
Explanation:
you have 3 string arguments:
1st one is the input
2nd is the pattern
3rd is the replacement string
In the pattern:
() is a capturing group: you can call it in the replacement string with \n, n being the 1-based index of the capturing group in the pattern. In this case, \1 is whatever matched "(^.{22})"
"^" is the beginning of a line (because we set the multiline options, otherwise it would be the beginning of the input string)
"." matches any character
{22} means you want preceeding pattern (in this case ".", any character) 22 times
So what that means is:
"in any line with 22 characters or more, replace the 22 first characters by those same 22 characters plus ";"
Related
I have a string s which reads my batch file content.
Suppose the content of s is as follows:
"\t\r\n##echo off\r\necho \"Hello World!!!\"\r\necho \"One\"\r\nset /p DUMMY=Hit ENTER to continue...\r\ncall second.bat\r\necho \"done!!!\"\r\ncall third.bat\r\necho \"done 3!!!\""
i want to write a condition which does the below,
while (s.Contains("call")) && (if string next to "call" contains(.bat))
how to acheive this?
I am new to c#. Please help me in this regard.
thanks in advance
You can split the string on new lines and process only the lines you want as follows:
foreach (string line in s.Split("\r\n", StringSplitOptions.None).Where(x => x.ToLower().StartsWith("call") && x.ToLower().EndsWith(".bat")))
{
// do stuff here
}
It seems that you are parsing some kind of log; in this case I suggest using regular expressions, e.g.
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
...
string source =
"\t\r\n##echo off\r\necho \"Hello World!!!\"\r\necho \"One\"\r\nset /p DUMMY=Hit ENTER to continue...\r\ncall second.bat\r\necho \"done!!!\"\r\ncall third.bat\r\necho \"done 3!!!\"";
var matches = Regex
.Matches(source, #"call.+?\.bat", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase)
.OfType<Match>()
.Select(match => match.Value);
// call second.bat
// call third.bat
foreach (string match in matches) {
...
}
It's unclear what is "string next", in the code above I've treated it as "after". In case it means "after several white spaces" the pattern will be
.Matches(source, #"call\s+?\.bat", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase)
The first thing that comes to my mind is using the text.Split ('\n', '\r') method. This way you get an array of strings which are separated by those line break symbols. Because you'd get empty strings, you should also filter those out. For that, I would recommend converting the array to a list, iterate through all elements and remove all empty strings (consider using string.IsNullOrEmpty (text)).
If you always have \r\n, you can use text.Split("\r\n", StringSplitOptions.None) instead, and don't have to worry about empty strings in between. You could still convert it to a list for easier use.
Then you would get a fine list of the entire content separated through line breaks. Now you could loop through that and do whatever you want.
Interesting situation I have here. I have some files in a folder that all have a very explicit string in the first line that I always know will be there. Want I want to do is really just append |DATA_SOURCE_KEY right after AVAILABLE_IND
//regex to search for the bb_course_*.bbd files
string courseRegex = #"BB_COURSES_([C][E][Q]|[F][A]|[H][S]|[S][1]|[S][2]|[S][P])\d{1,6}.bbd";
string courseHeaderRegex = #"EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND";
//get files from the directory specifed in the GetFiles parameter and returns the matches to the regex
var matches = Directory.GetFiles(#"c:\courseFolder\").Where(path => Regex.Match(path, courseRegex).Success);
//prints the files returned
foreach (string file in matches)
{
Console.WriteLine(file);
File.WriteAllText(file, Regex.Replace(File.ReadAllText(file), courseHeaderRegex, "EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY"));
}
But this code takes the original occurrence of the matching regex, replaces it with my replacement value, and then does it 3 more times.
EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY|EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY|EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY|EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY
And I can't figure out why with breakpoints. My loop is running only 12 times to match the # of files I have in the directory. My only guess is that File.WriteAllText is somehow recursively searching itself after replacing the text and re-replacing. If that makes sense. Any ideas? Is it because courseHeaderRegex is so explicit?
If I change courseHeaderRegex to string courseHeaderRegex = #"AVAILABLE_IND";
then I get the correct changes in my files
EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY
I'd just like to understand why the original way doesn't work.
I think your problem is that you need to escape the | character in courseHeaderRegex:
string courseHeaderRegex = #"EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY\|COURSE_ID\|COURSE_NAME\|AVAILABLE_IND";
The character | is the Alternation Operator and it will match 'EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY' , 'COURSE_ID' , ,'COURSE_NAME' and 'AVAILABLE_IND', replacing each of them with your substitution string.
What about
string newString = File.ReadAllText(file)
.Replace(#"EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND",#"EXTERNAL_COURSE_KEY|COURSE_ID|COURSE_NAME|AVAILABLE_IND|DATA_SOURCE_KEY");
just using a simple String.Replace()
I am relatively new with Regular Expressions so please excuse me.
I am currently trying to group each line based on the record line. So, for example, I want all lines proceding the record Line to be grouped into one string, until the next record line. I have been trying to use regular expressions, and I have obtained a result that is very close to what I want, however, there is a newline present at the beginning of the array that I am reading it into.
This is the code I am using to split the data up.
using (StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(file))
{
string line;
line = sr.ReadToEnd();
string[] parts = Regex.Split(line, #"(?=PA11)");
List<string> parameterList = new List<string>(parts);
foreach (string s in parameterList)
{
listBox1.Items.Add(s);
}
}
And this is the result looks like this:
*newline*
LINE 000001 000001 TEST A B TEST OUTPUT *More Lines*
LINE 000002 000002 TEST A B TEST OUTPUT *More Lines*
If anyone can tell me what it is I am doing wrong, I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you in advance.
If your need is that simple, don't use a REGEX.
using (StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(file))
{
string line = sr.ReadLine();
while( line != null ){
if( line.StartsWith( "PA11" ) ){
string[] parts = line.Split( " " );
List<string> parameterList = new List<string>(parts);
foreach (string s in parameterList)
listBox1.Items.Add(s);
}
}
}
Looks to me like it's not inserting a newline but a blank entry. Your regex matches the very beginning of the input because the first line starts with PA11, and it doesn't consume any characters, so the first item in the parts array is an empty string. You should be able to prevent that by forcing the regex to consume some characters, such as the newline preceding the PA11 line:
string[] parts = Regex.Split(line, #"[\r\n]+(?=PA11)");
...or by making sure it doesn't match unless there's a newline before PA11:
string[] parts = Regex.Split(line, #"(?<=[\r\n])(?=PA11)");
Why not use string.split? string[] parts = line.split("PA11")..
you can reinsert the demimater back into each part.
The reason it creates an empty [0] element is there is probably whitespace (newline) at the beginning of the string.
The below will work, code tested here-> http://www.ideone.com/tsOlI (I'm no .NET expert)
string[] parts = Regex.Split(line, #"(?=(?<!^\s*)PA11)");
Expanded:
(?= # look ahead, we're at the first 'PA11'
(?<!^\s*) # before its ok, there can't be '^\s*' before us
PA11 # ok, this 'PA11' is good to split
) # end look ahead
Beware that if there is anything other than whitespace before the first PA11,
it will create a [0] element with that block.
It could be done a little more meaningfull in a match all context with something like this:
(?:^\s*|(?<=\n))\s*(PA11.*?)(?=\n+PA11|$)
use single line modifier or change .*? to [\S\s]*?
It will only match from beginning of block to before the next beginning (or end of string)
and strips residual boundry whitespace characters.
In C# what's the best way to remove blank lines i.e., lines that contain only whitespace from a string? I'm happy to use a Regex if that's the best solution.
EDIT: I should add I'm using .NET 2.0.
Bounty update: I'll roll this back after the bounty is awarded, but I wanted to clarify a few things.
First, any Perl 5 compat regex will work. This is not limited to .NET developers. The title and tags have been edited to reflect this.
Second, while I gave a quick example in the bounty details, it isn't the only test you must satisfy. Your solution must remove all lines which consist of nothing but whitespace, as well as the last newline. If there is a string which, after running through your regex, ends with "/r/n" or any whitespace characters, it fails.
If you want to remove lines containing any whitespace (tabs, spaces), try:
string fix = Regex.Replace(original, #"^\s*$\n", string.Empty, RegexOptions.Multiline);
Edit (for #Will): The simplest solution to trim trailing newlines would be to use TrimEnd on the resulting string, e.g.:
string fix =
Regex.Replace(original, #"^\s*$\n", string.Empty, RegexOptions.Multiline)
.TrimEnd();
string outputString;
using (StringReader reader = new StringReader(originalString)
using (StringWriter writer = new StringWriter())
{
string line;
while((line = reader.ReadLine()) != null)
{
if (line.Trim().Length > 0)
writer.WriteLine(line);
}
outputString = writer.ToString();
}
off the top of my head...
string fixed = Regex.Replace(input, "\s*(\n)","$1");
turns this:
fdasdf
asdf
[tabs]
[spaces]
asdf
into this:
fdasdf
asdf
asdf
Using LINQ:
var result = string.Join("\r\n",
multilineString.Split(new string[] { "\r\n" }, ...None)
.Where(s => !string.IsNullOrWhitespace(s)));
If you're dealing with large inputs and/or inconsistent line endings you should use a StringReader and do the above old-school with a foreach loop instead.
Alright this answer is in accordance to the clarified requirements specified in the bounty:
I also need to remove any trailing newlines, and my Regex-fu is
failing. My bounty goes to anyone who can give me a regex which passes
this test: StripWhitespace("test\r\n \r\nthis\r\n\r\n") ==
"test\r\nthis"
So Here's the answer:
(?<=\r?\n)(\s*$\r?\n)+|(?<=\r?\n)(\r?\n)+|(\r?\n)+\z
Or in the C# code provided by #Chris Schmich:
string fix = Regex.Replace("test\r\n \r\nthis\r\n\r\n", #"(?<=\r?\n)(\s*$\r?\n)+|(?<=\r?\n)(\r?\n)+|(\r?\n)+\z", string.Empty, RegexOptions.Multiline);
Now let's try to understand it. There are three optional patterns in here which I am willing to replace with string.empty.
(?<=\r?\n)(\s*$\r?\n)+ - matches one to unlimited lines containing only white space and preceeded by a line break (but does not match the first preceeding line breaks).
(?<=\r?\n)(\r?\n)+ - matches one to unlimited empty lines with no content that are preceeded by a line break (but does not match the first preceeding line breaks).
(\r?\n)+\z - matches one to unlimited line breaks at the end of the tested string (trailing line breaks as you called them)
That satisfies your test perfectly! But also satisfies both \r\n and \n line break styles! Test it out! I believe this will be the most correct answer, although simpler expression would pass your specified bounty test, this regex passes more complex conditions.
EDIT: #Will pointed out a potential flaw in the last pattern match of the above regex in that it won't match multiple line breaks containing white space at the end of the test string. So let's change that last pattern to this:
\b\s+\z The \b is a word boundry (beginning or END of a word), the \s+ is one or more white space characters, the \z is the end of the test string (end of "file"). So now it will match any assortment of whitespace at the end of the file including tabs and spaces in addition to carriage returns and line breaks. I tested both of #Will's provided test cases.
So all together now, it should be:
(?<=\r?\n)(\s*$\r?\n)+|(?<=\r?\n)(\r?\n)+|\b\s+\z
EDIT #2: Alright there is one more possible case #Wil found that the last regex doesn't cover. That case is inputs that have line breaks at the beginning of the file before any content. So lets add one more pattern to match the beginning of the file.
\A\s+ - The \A match the beginning of the file, the \s+ match one or more white space characters.
So now we've got:
\A\s+|(?<=\r?\n)(\s*$\r?\n)+|(?<=\r?\n)(\r?\n)+|\b\s+\z
So now we have four patterns for matching:
whitespace at the beginning of the file,
redundant line breaks containing white space, (ex: \r\n \r\n\t\r\n)
redundant line breaks with no content, (ex: \r\n\r\n)
whitespace at the end of the file
not good. I would use this one using JSON.net:
var o = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(prettyJson);
new minifiedJson = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(o, Formatting.None);
In response to Will's bounty, which expects a solution that takes "test\r\n \r\nthis\r\n\r\n" and outputs "test\r\nthis", I've come up with a solution that makes use of atomic grouping (aka Nonbacktracking Subexpressions on MSDN). I recommend reading those articles for a better understanding of what's happening. Ultimately the atomic group helped match the trailing newline characters that were otherwise left behind.
Use RegexOptions.Multiline with this pattern:
^\s+(?!\B)|\s*(?>[\r\n]+)$
Here is an example with some test cases, including some I gathered from Will's comments on other posts, as well as my own.
string[] inputs =
{
"one\r\n \r\ntwo\r\n\t\r\n \r\n",
"test\r\n \r\nthis\r\n\r\n",
"\r\n\r\ntest!",
"\r\ntest\r\n ! test",
"\r\ntest \r\n ! "
};
string[] outputs =
{
"one\r\ntwo",
"test\r\nthis",
"test!",
"test\r\n ! test",
"test \r\n ! "
};
string pattern = #"^\s+(?!\B)|\s*(?>[\r\n]+)$";
for (int i = 0; i < inputs.Length; i++)
{
string result = Regex.Replace(inputs[i], pattern, "",
RegexOptions.Multiline);
Console.WriteLine(result == outputs[i]);
}
EDIT: To address the issue of the pattern failing to clean up text with a mix of whitespace and newlines, I added \s* to the last alternation portion of the regex. My previous pattern was redundant and I realized \s* would handle both cases.
string corrected =
System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex.Replace(input, #"\n+", "\n");
I'll go with:
public static string RemoveEmptyLines(string value) {
using (StringReader reader = new StringReader(yourstring)) {
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
string line;
while ((line = reader.ReadLine()) != null) {
if (line.Trim().Length > 0)
builder.AppendLine(line);
}
return builder.ToString();
}
}
Here's another option: use the StringReader class. Advantages: one pass over the string, creates no intermediate arrays.
public static string RemoveEmptyLines(this string text) {
var builder = new StringBuilder();
using (var reader = new StringReader(text)) {
while (reader.Peek() != -1) {
string line = reader.ReadLine();
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(line))
builder.AppendLine(line);
}
}
return builder.ToString();
}
Note: the IsNullOrWhiteSpace method is new in .NET 4.0. If you don't have that, it's trivial to write on your own:
public static bool IsNullOrWhiteSpace(string text) {
return string.IsNullOrEmpty(text) || text.Trim().Length < 1;
}
In response to Will's bounty here is a Perl sub that gives correct response to the test case:
sub StripWhitespace {
my $str = shift;
print "'",$str,"'\n";
$str =~ s/(?:\R+\s+(\R)+)|(?:()\R+)$/$1/g;
print "'",$str,"'\n";
return $str;
}
StripWhitespace("test\r\n \r\nthis\r\n\r\n");
output:
'test
this
'
'test
this'
In order to not use \R, replace it with [\r\n] and inverse the alternative. This one produces the same result:
$str =~ s/(?:(\S)[\r\n]+)|(?:[\r\n]+\s+([\r\n])+)/$1/g;
There're no needs for special configuration neither multi line support. Nevertheless you can add s flag if it's mandatory.
$str =~ s/(?:(\S)[\r\n]+)|(?:[\r\n]+\s+([\r\n])+)/$1/sg;
if its only White spaces why don't you use the C# string method
string yourstring = "A O P V 1.5";
yourstring.Replace(" ", string.empty);
result will be "AOPV1.5"
char[] delimiters = new char[] { '\r', '\n' };
string[] lines = value.Split(delimiters, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
string result = string.Join(Environment.NewLine, lines)
Here is something simple if working against each individual line...
(^\s+|\s+|^)$
Eh. Well, after all that, I couldn't find one that would hit all the corner cases I could figure out. The following is my latest incantation of a regex that strips
All empty lines from the start of a string
Not including any spaces at the beginning of the first non-whitespace line
All empty lines after the first non-whitespace line and before the last non-whitespace line
Again, preserving all whitespace at the beginning of any non-whitespace line
All empty lines after the last non-whitespace line, including the last newline
(?<=(\r\n)|^)\s*\r\n|\r\n\s*$
which essentially says:
Immediately after
The beginning of the string OR
The end of the last line
Match as much contiguous whitespace as possible that ends in a newline*
OR
Match a newline and as much contiguous whitespace as possible that ends at the end of the string
The first half catches all whitespace at the start of the string until the first non-whitespace line, or all whitespace between non-whitespace lines. The second half snags the remaining whitespace in the string, including the last non-whitespace line's newline.
Thanks to all who tried to help out; your answers helped me think through everything I needed to consider when matching.
*(This regex considers a newline to be \r\n, and so will have to be adjusted depending on the source of the string. No options need to be set in order to run the match.)
String Extension
public static string UnPrettyJson(this string s)
{
try
{
// var jsonObj = Json.Decode(s);
// var sObject = Json.Encode(value); dont work well with array of strings c:['a','b','c']
object jsonObj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(s);
return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(jsonObj, Formatting.None);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
throw new Exception(
s + " Is Not a valid JSON ! (please validate it in http://www.jsoneditoronline.org )", e);
}
}
Im not sure is it efficient but =)
List<string> strList = myString.Split(new string[] { "\n" }, StringSplitOptions.None).ToList<string>();
myString = string.Join("\n", strList.Where(s => !string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(s)).Distinct().ToList());
Try this.
string s = "Test1" + Environment.NewLine + Environment.NewLine + "Test 2";
Console.WriteLine(s);
string result = s.Replace(Environment.NewLine, String.Empty);
Console.WriteLine(result);
s = Regex.Replace(s, #"^[^\n\S]*\n", "");
[^\n\S] matches any character that's not a linefeed or a non-whitespace character--so, any whitespace character except \n. But most likely the only characters you have to worry about are space, tab and carriage return, so this should work too:
s = Regex.Replace(s, #"^[ \t\r]*\n", "");
And if you want it to catch the last line, without a final linefeed:
s = Regex.Replace(s, #"^[ \t\r]*\n?", "");
How can I replace Line Breaks within a string in C#?
Use replace with Environment.NewLine
myString = myString.Replace(System.Environment.NewLine, "replacement text"); //add a line terminating ;
As mentioned in other posts, if the string comes from another environment (OS) then you'd need to replace that particular environments implementation of new line control characters.
The solutions posted so far either only replace Environment.NewLine or they fail if the replacement string contains line breaks because they call string.Replace multiple times.
Here's a solution that uses a regular expression to make all three replacements in just one pass over the string. This means that the replacement string can safely contain line breaks.
string result = Regex.Replace(input, #"\r\n?|\n", replacementString);
To extend The.Anyi.9's answer, you should also be aware of the different types of line break in general use. Dependent on where your file originated, you may want to look at making sure you catch all the alternatives...
string replaceWith = "";
string removedBreaks = Line.Replace("\r\n", replaceWith).Replace("\n", replaceWith).Replace("\r", replaceWith);
should get you going...
I would use Environment.Newline when I wanted to insert a newline for a string, but not to remove all newlines from a string.
Depending on your platform you can have different types of newlines, but even inside the same platform often different types of newlines are used. In particular when dealing with file formats and protocols.
string ReplaceNewlines(string blockOfText, string replaceWith)
{
return blockOfText.Replace("\r\n", replaceWith).Replace("\n", replaceWith).Replace("\r", replaceWith);
}
If your code is supposed to run in different environments, I would consider using the Environment.NewLine constant, since it is specifically the newline used in the specific environment.
line = line.Replace(Environment.NewLine, "newLineReplacement");
However, if you get the text from a file originating on another system, this might not be the correct answer, and you should replace with whatever newline constant is used on the other system. It will typically be \n or \r\n.
if you want to "clean" the new lines, flamebaud comment using regex #"[\r\n]+" is the best choice.
using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
class MainClass {
public static void Main (string[] args) {
string str = "AAA\r\nBBB\r\n\r\n\r\nCCC\r\r\rDDD\n\n\nEEE";
Console.WriteLine (str.Replace(System.Environment.NewLine, "-"));
/* Result:
AAA
-BBB
-
-
-CCC
DDD---EEE
*/
Console.WriteLine (Regex.Replace(str, #"\r\n?|\n", "-"));
// Result:
// AAA-BBB---CCC---DDD---EEE
Console.WriteLine (Regex.Replace(str, #"[\r\n]+", "-"));
// Result:
// AAA-BBB-CCC-DDD-EEE
}
}
Use new in .NET 6 method
myString = myString.ReplaceLineEndings();
Replaces ALL newline sequences in the current string.
Documentation:
ReplaceLineEndings
Don't forget that replace doesn't do the replacement in the string, but returns a new string with the characters replaced. The following will remove line breaks (not replace them). I'd use #Brian R. Bondy's method if replacing them with something else, perhaps wrapped as an extension method. Remember to check for null values first before calling Replace or the extension methods provided.
string line = ...
line = line.Replace( "\r", "").Replace( "\n", "" );
As extension methods:
public static class StringExtensions
{
public static string RemoveLineBreaks( this string lines )
{
return lines.Replace( "\r", "").Replace( "\n", "" );
}
public static string ReplaceLineBreaks( this string lines, string replacement )
{
return lines.Replace( "\r\n", replacement )
.Replace( "\r", replacement )
.Replace( "\n", replacement );
}
}
To make sure all possible ways of line breaks (Windows, Mac and Unix) are replaced you should use:
string.Replace("\r\n", "\n").Replace('\r', '\n').Replace('\n', 'replacement');
and in this order, to not to make extra line breaks, when you find some combination of line ending chars.
Why not both?
string ReplacementString = "";
Regex.Replace(strin.Replace(System.Environment.NewLine, ReplacementString), #"(\r\n?|\n)", ReplacementString);
Note: Replace strin with the name of your input string.
I needed to replace the \r\n with an actual carriage return and line feed and replace \t with an actual tab. So I came up with the following:
public string Transform(string data)
{
string result = data;
char cr = (char)13;
char lf = (char)10;
char tab = (char)9;
result = result.Replace("\\r", cr.ToString());
result = result.Replace("\\n", lf.ToString());
result = result.Replace("\\t", tab.ToString());
return result;
}
var answer = Regex.Replace(value, "(\n|\r)+", replacementString);
As new line can be delimited by \n, \r and \r\n, first we’ll replace \r and \r\n with \n, and only then split data string.
The following lines should go to the parseCSV method:
function parseCSV(data) {
//alert(data);
//replace UNIX new lines
data = data.replace(/\r\n/g, "\n");
//replace MAC new lines
data = data.replace(/\r/g, "\n");
//split into rows
var rows = data.split("\n");
}
Use the .Replace() method
Line.Replace("\n", "whatever you want to replace with");
Best way to replace linebreaks safely is
yourString.Replace("\r\n","\n") //handling windows linebreaks
.Replace("\r","\n") //handling mac linebreaks
that should produce a string with only \n (eg linefeed) as linebreaks.
this code is usefull to fix mixed linebreaks too.
Another option is to create a StringReader over the string in question. On the reader, do .ReadLine() in a loop. Then you have the lines separated, no matter what (consistent or inconsistent) separators they had. With that, you can proceed as you wish; one possibility is to use a StringBuilder and call .AppendLine on it.
The advantage is, you let the framework decide what constitutes a "line break".
string s = Regex.Replace(source_string, "\n", "\r\n");
or
string s = Regex.Replace(source_string, "\r\n", "\n");
depending on which way you want to go.
Hopes it helps.
If you want to replace only the newlines:
var input = #"sdfhlu \r\n sdkuidfs\r\ndfgdgfd";
var match = #"[\\ ]+";
var replaceWith = " ";
Console.WriteLine("input: " + input);
var x = Regex.Replace(input.Replace(#"\n", replaceWith).Replace(#"\r", replaceWith), match, replaceWith);
Console.WriteLine("output: " + x);
If you want to replace newlines, tabs and white spaces:
var input = #"sdfhlusdkuidfs\r\ndfgdgfd";
var match = #"[\\s]+";
var replaceWith = "";
Console.WriteLine("input: " + input);
var x = Regex.Replace(input, match, replaceWith);
Console.WriteLine("output: " + x);
This is a very long winded one-liner solution but it is the only one that I had found to work if you cannot use the the special character escapes like "\r" and "\n" and \x0d and \u000D as well as System.Environment.NewLine as parameters to thereplace() method
MyStr.replace( System.String.Concat( System.Char.ConvertFromUtf32(13).ToString(), System.Char.ConvertFromUtf32(10).ToString() ), ReplacementString );
This is somewhat offtopic but to get it to work inside Visual Studio's XML .props files, which invoke .NET via the XML properties, I had to dress it up like it is shown below.
The Visual Studio XML --> .NET environment just would not accept the special character escapes like "\r" and "\n" and \x0d and \u000D as well as System.Environment.NewLine as parameters to thereplace() method.
$([System.IO.File]::ReadAllText('MyFile.txt').replace( $([System.String]::Concat($([System.Char]::ConvertFromUtf32(13).ToString()),$([System.Char]::ConvertFromUtf32(10).ToString()))),$([System.String]::Concat('^',$([System.Char]::ConvertFromUtf32(13).ToString()),$([System.Char]::ConvertFromUtf32(10).ToString())))))
Based on #mark-bayers answer and for cleaner output:
string result = Regex.Replace(ex.Message, #"(\r\n?|\r?\n)+", "replacement text");
It removes \r\n , \n and \r while perefer longer one and simplify multiple occurances to one.