83

I thought this code would work, but the regular expression doesn't ever match the \r\n. I have viewed the data I am reading in a hex editor and verified there really is a hex D and hex A pattern in the file.

I have also tried the regular expressions /\xD\xA/m and /\x0D\x0A/m but they also didn't match.

This is my code right now:

   lines2 = lines.gsub( /\r\n/m, "\n" )
   if ( lines == lines2 )
       print "still the same\n"
   else
       print "made the change\n"
   end

In addition to alternatives, it would be nice to know what I'm doing wrong (to facilitate some learning on my part). :)

14 Answers 14

181

Use String#strip

Returns a copy of str with leading and trailing whitespace removed.

e.g

"    hello    ".strip   #=> "hello"   
"\tgoodbye\r\n".strip   #=> "goodbye"

Using gsub

string = string.gsub(/\r/," ")
string = string.gsub(/\n/," ")
3
  • 5
    It won't filter newlines in the middle of text: "line1\n line2".strip #=> "line1\n line2"
    – ndrix
    May 20, 2012 at 12:09
  • If used within a each_line call, then that doesnt matter. May 20, 2012 at 12:26
  • 9
    Removing all surrounding whitespace != removing carriage returns Sep 26, 2013 at 9:49
36

Generally when I deal with stripping \r or \n, I'll look for both by doing something like

lines.gsub(/\r\n?/, "\n");

I've found that depending on how the data was saved (the OS used, editor used, Jupiter's relation to Io at the time) there may or may not be the newline after the carriage return. It does seem weird that you see both characters in hex mode. Hope this helps.

33

If you are using Rails, there is a squish method

"\tgoodbye\r\n".squish => "goodbye"

"\tgood \t\r\nbye\r\n".squish => "good bye"

1
  • 4
    For non-Rails users, it's implemented as str.gsub(/[[:space:]]+/, ' ').strip
    – sobstel
    Dec 3, 2017 at 13:32
23

What do you get when you do puts lines? That will give you a clue.

By default File.open opens the file in text mode, so your \r\n characters will be automatically converted to \n. Maybe that's the reason lines are always equal to lines2. To prevent Ruby from parsing the line ends use the rb mode:

C:\> copy con lala.txt
a
file
with
many
lines
^Z

C:\> irb
irb(main):001:0> text = File.open('lala.txt').read
=> "a\nfile\nwith\nmany\nlines\n"
irb(main):002:0> bin = File.open('lala.txt', 'rb').read
=> "a\r\nfile\r\nwith\r\nmany\r\nlines\r\n"
irb(main):003:0>

But from your question and code I see you simply need to open the file with the default modifier. You don't need any conversion and may use the shorter File.read.

1
18
modified_string = string.gsub(/\s+/, ' ').strip
1
  • 2
    This replaces any whitespace character, not just CR/LFs
    – hoffmanc
    Dec 20, 2013 at 20:30
15
lines2 = lines.split.join("\n")
1
  • 4
    This will also strip tabs and whitespace, which may not be what the user wants.
    – Doug
    Apr 1, 2012 at 16:14
14

"still the same\n".chomp
or
"still the same\n".chomp!

http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/String.html#method-i-chomp

1
  • 1
    chomp will only removes from the end of a string, seems that the question wants to remove all carriage returns.
    – Dex
    Jul 19, 2014 at 22:53
6

How about the following?

irb(main):003:0> my_string = "Some text with a carriage return \r"
=> "Some text with a carriage return \r"
irb(main):004:0> my_string.gsub(/\r/,"")
=> "Some text with a carriage return "
irb(main):005:0>

Or...

irb(main):007:0> my_string = "Some text with a carriage return \r\n"
=> "Some text with a carriage return \r\n"
irb(main):008:0> my_string.gsub(/\r\n/,"\n")
=> "Some text with a carriage return \n"
irb(main):009:0>
1
  • also, I checked: "\r\n" != "\n". So it looks like the original posters code is right.
    – rampion
    Nov 13, 2008 at 18:53
5

I think your regex is almost complete - here's what I would do:

lines2 = lines.gsub(/[\r\n]+/m, "\n")

In the above, I've put \r and \n into a class (that way it doesn't matter in which order they might appear) and added the "+" qualifier (so that "\r\n\r\n\r\n" would also match once, and the whole thing replaced with "\n")

4

Just another variant:

lines.delete(" \n")
2

Why not read the file in text mode, rather than binary mode?

2
lines.map(&:strip).join(" ")
1

You can use this :

my_string.strip.gsub(/\s+/, ' ')
1
0
def dos2unix(input)
  input.each_byte.map { |c| c.chr unless c == 13 }.join
end

remove_all_the_carriage_returns = dos2unix(some_blob)

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