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Fellow Regexers,

I have a flat file full of expressions like:

SELECT * FROM CONVENIENT_ONE_LINE_QUERY
"SELECT * FROM THIS_QUERY
WHERE IS_SPREAD_OVER == 123
ORDER BY MULTIPLE_LINES
HAVING AND_IS_BETWEEN_QUOTES"
SELECT * FROM ANOTHER_CONVENIENT_ONE_LINER

I want to eliminate the CRLF between the quotes and the quotes themselves, so that all my queries are convenient one-liners like that:

SELECT * FROM CONVENIENT_ONE_LINE_QUERY
SELECT * FROM THIS_QUERY WHERE IS_SPREAD_OVER == 123 ORDER BY MULTIPLE_LINES HAVING BUT_IS_BETWEEN_QUOTES
SELECT * FROM ANOTHER_CONVENIENT_ONE_LINER

Please post the RegEx flavor used in the solution. I'm using TextCrawler, which claims to be ECMA262 (same as VBScript/Javascript) and the closest I came to a solution is something like:

(\r\n".*)(.*)\r\n(.*"\r\n)

Forgive my n00biness. Best regards, Lynx Kepler

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  • Can you show an example of input and result? I don't get the relation from the first example to the other, since more than quotes and line breaks differ.
    – Qtax
    May 18, 2011 at 15:25
  • I corrected the input and output, now only quotes and line breaks differ (or should). Essentially I wanna swap each line break that is between quotes for the space character. May 18, 2011 at 15:41

2 Answers 2

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You could first remove all CRLFs if the next " is at the end of a line:

result = subject.replace(/\r\n(?=[^"]*"$)/mg, " ");

Explanation:

\r\n    # Match a CRLF
(?=     # if and only if
 [^"]*  # it is followed by any number of non-quote characters
 "      # and a quote
 $      # at the end of a line
)       # End of lookahead.

This transforms your example into

SELECT * FROM CONVENIENT_ONE_LINE_QUERY
"SELECT * FROM THIS_QUERY WHERE IS_SPREAD_OVER == 123 ORDER BY MULTIPLE_LINES HAVING AND_IS_BETWEEN_QUOTES"
SELECT * FROM ANOTHER_CONVENIENT_ONE_LINER

enter image description here

Then, in a second step, remove the quotes:

result = subject.replace(/^"|"$/mg, "");
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  • This solution is ignoring the many one-liners that don't have quotes - they would be concatenated. May 18, 2011 at 16:04
  • @Lynx Kepler: You're right, I missed that case. I think my new solution works now. May 18, 2011 at 16:25
  • Which flavor of regex did you use? Which program did you run this regex in? May 18, 2011 at 17:46
  • I couldn't reproduce it in TextCrawler. But I'll try this RegexBuddy. May 18, 2011 at 18:02
  • Did you remember to remove the slashes before copying it into RegexBuddy? May 18, 2011 at 19:52
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With Perl you could do something like:

s/^"([^"]*)"$/$s = $1; $s =~ s!(?:\n|\r)+! !g; $s/meg

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