218

I have a string in the following format

string s = "This is a Test String.\n   This is a next line.\t This is a tab.\n'

I want to remove all the occurrences of \n and \r from the string above.

I have tried string s = s.Trim(new char[] {'\n', '\r'}); but it didn't help.

12 Answers 12

415

I like to use regular expressions. In this case you could do:

string replacement = Regex.Replace(s, @"\t|\n|\r", "");

Regular expressions aren't as popular in the .NET world as they are in the dynamic languages, but they provide a lot of power to manipulate strings.

4
  • 1
    This was definitely the best solution for me. A smooth blend of this C# and javascript was all I needed to resolve my issue. Nov 26, 2013 at 19:30
  • 1
    I had a similar problem where I needed also to remove newlines from my string. I tried to do it with string.Replace, didn't work. When I used Regex.Replace with the exact same regular expression string as the parameter, it worked. Thanks.
    – instanceof
    Jan 26, 2016 at 8:57
  • 14
    Be careful if using this in a loop that processes 1M+ items. Regex is way slower than just String.Replace
    – Nick
    Jun 23, 2016 at 16:02
  • 6
    The code example also removes tabs \t, which is not in question. Aug 20, 2019 at 2:19
86

You want to use String.Replace to remove a character.

s = s.Replace("\n", String.Empty);
s = s.Replace("\r", String.Empty);
s = s.Replace("\t", String.Empty);

Note that String.Trim(params char[] trimChars) only removes leading and trailing characters in trimChars from the instance invoked on.

You could make an extension method, which avoids the performance problems of the above of making lots of temporary strings:

static string RemoveChars(this string s, params char[] removeChars) {
    Contract.Requires<ArgumentNullException>(s != null);
    Contract.Requires<ArgumentNullException>(removeChars != null);
    var sb = new StringBuilder(s.Length);
    foreach(char c in s) { 
        if(!removeChars.Contains(c)) {
            sb.Append(c);
        }
    }
    return sb.ToString();
}
1
  • 10
    Note that this approach will create two intermediate string objects. Depending on the size of your string, this could have significant performance and memory consumption consequences.
    – cdhowie
    Nov 10, 2010 at 2:37
50

I know this is an old post, however I thought I'd share the method I use to remove new line characters.

s.Replace(Environment.NewLine, "");

References:

MSDN String.Replace Method and MSDN Environment.NewLine Property

2
  • nice for Mono support
    – Nick
    Jun 23, 2016 at 15:57
  • 4
    In cross-environment (i.e. Windows app that is feed with data from Unix system) application this will cause more problems than profits. Jun 17, 2019 at 10:31
18

If speed and low memory usage are important, do something like this:

var sb = new StringBuilder(s.Length);

foreach (char i in s)
    if (i != '\n' && i != '\r' && i != '\t')
        sb.Append(i);

s = sb.ToString();
2
  • Yes, i'd go with this too (in an extension method). Always good to use StringBuilder. +1
    – RPM1984
    Nov 10, 2010 at 2:39
  • 4
    "Always good to use the StringBuilder" < I'm no pro, but that's not strictly true. This article by Jeff Atwood provides a fun insight into string manipulation/concatenation and ultimately, optimisation. Jul 1, 2014 at 9:29
5

just do that

s = s.Replace("\n", String.Empty).Replace("\t", String.Empty).Replace("\r", String.Empty);
3

A LINQ approach:

string s = "This is a Test String.\n   This is a next line.\t This is a tab.\n'";

string s1 = String.Join("", s.Where(c => c != '\n' && c != '\r' && c != '\t'));
1
  • 3
    This is using the generic overload of string.Join that will call ToString on each char returned by the query. Better to just pass the query results to the string constructor. s1 = new string(s.Where(....).ToArrary());
    – juharr
    Jan 5, 2017 at 14:29
2

The right choice really depends on how big the input string is and what the perforce and memory requirement are, but I would use a regular expression like

string result = Regex.Replace(s, @"\r\n?|\n|\t", String.Empty);

Or if we need to apply the same replacement multiple times, it is better to use a compiled version for the Regex like

var regex = new Regex(@"\r\n?|\n|\t", RegexOptions.Compiled); 
string result = regex.Replace(s, String.Empty);

NOTE: different scenarios requite different approaches to achieve the best performance and the minimum memory consumption

2

This can be easily done using ReplaceLineEndings since .NET 6:

This method searches for all newline sequences within the string and canonicalizes them to the newline sequence provided by replacementText. If replacementText is Empty, all newline sequences within the string will be removed.

Note that it supports multiple types of newline sequences:

The list of recognized newline sequences is CR (U+000D), LF (U+000A), CRLF (U+000D U+000A), NEL (U+0085), LS (U+2028), FF (U+000C), and PS (U+2029). This list is given by the Unicode Standard, Sec. 5.8, Recommendation R4 and Table 5-2.

0

Well... I would like you to understand more specific areas of space. \t is actually assorted as a horizontal space, not a vertical space. (test out inserting \t in Notepad)

If you use Java, simply use \v. See the reference below.

\h - A horizontal whitespace character:

[\t\xA0\u1680\u180e\u2000-\u200a\u202f\u205f\u3000]

\v - A vertical whitespace character:

[\n\x0B\f\r\x85\u2028\u2029]

But I am aware that you use .NET. So my answer to replacing every vertical space is..

string replacement = Regex.Replace(s, @"[\n\u000B\u000C\r\u0085\u2028\u2029]", "");
1
  • It looks like an answer to some other question... and also missing actual reference... Aug 23, 2017 at 7:25
0
string remove = Regex.Replace(txtsp.Value).ToUpper(), @"\t|\n|\r", "");
1
-4

You can use Trim if you want to remove from start and end.

string stringWithoutNewLine = "\n\nHello\n\n".Trim();
0
-6

FYI,

Trim() does that already.

The following LINQPad sample:

void Main()
{
    var s = " \rsdsdsdsd\nsadasdasd\r\n ";
    s.Length.Dump();
    s.Trim().Length.Dump();
}

Outputs:

23
18
1
  • 7
    That doesn't remove the \n in the middle. Sep 26, 2015 at 16:23

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