In the editor of Visual Studio 2013, which I understand is very similar to 2012 and allegedly uses .NET regexes, I cannot get the replacement string to insert a backslash and an ‘n
’ — is that even possible?
I wish to insert ‘\n
’ after the first ‘"
’ on some (but not all) lines of a C programme, i.e. make the string literals start with a new line.
Obviously the expression to find is ‘^([^"]*)"
’, and the replacement is … what? ‘$1"
’ + magic + ‘n
’, where magic is whatever inserts a backslash.
I am not trying to write .NET code to do this, but to do it interactively in the editor.
N.B. This question does not apply to MSVS 2010, which has an older RE syntax.
Officially …
None of the Substitutions in the .NET reference is appropriate.
Regular-expressions.info says ‘You can't and needn't escape the backslash, exclamation point, or any other character except dollar, because they have no special meaning in .NET, JavaScript, VBScript, and PCRE2 replacement strings’ — but MSVS RE Replace appears to treat ‘\n
’ in the replacement as a new line!
RegexHero (meant for .NET) says that ‘^([^"]*)"
’→‘$1"\n
’ transforms ‘asdf"qwer
’→‘asdf"\nqwer
’, which agrees with Regular-expressions.info.
Conclusion
My impression –and fear– is that the MSVS IDE itself transforms some C-style escapes such as ‘\n
’, ‘\r
’ and ‘\t
’ in the edit dialogue before passing it to the RE engine, but leaves other backslashes unchanged. In particular, it does not provide a form such as ‘\\
’ (or ‘$\
’), as would be required to make inserting backslash possible. Given the documented RE engine behaviour, this is the only interpretation that makes sense to me; the conclusion is that you cannot insert a backslash that is interpreted as part of a C-style escape.
Experiments
I have tried various things for magic:
- These all yield themselves, even before ‘
n
’:- ‘
\\
’ - ‘
\134
’ - ‘
\x5cn
’
- ‘
- ‘
\
’ before ‘n
’ yields a new line - ‘
$\
’ before ‘n
’ yields ‘$
’ + a new line
Workaround
I suspect I have to do a two step job, e.g.:
- ‘
^([^"]*)"
’→‘$1"\\n
’ - ‘
^([^"]*"\\)\\
’→‘$1
’
… that works, but is clumsier and more error-prone than a one-step solution.
\$1
? I mean, what would that give you$1
??? Should it not allowed to be\\\$1
? If that's the case\\n
should give a\n
literal,\$1
would give you a literal backslash followed by the last match of the first group. To insert literal$1
you need a replacement string$$1
, for literal\$1
you need\$$1
. I expect that to work in the IDE as well as the .NET run-time.\`, then
\\n` should be literal and not newline.\
, then\n
should be literal and not newline.