3

I open a file (saved as ISO 8859-1) using the terminal (Ubuntu) and see where new lines should be the following character ^M (surrounded by XX before and after).

Now, I run this code in php to see how PHP handles that:

$text=str_split($text);
var_dump($text);

in the var_dump I see only an array with size 4 and only the 'X' in it.
Any idea what is going on in there?

EDIT: open office translates this ^M correctly to a new line.

ANOTHER EDIT: The following code changes nothing. echo str_replace("\r","XXXXXX",$text); I run this before the str_split

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  • ^M or \r is called "carriage return". It's often companion of the "line feed" \n on DOS/Windows or for network protocols. Some text editors display it only if it isn't used continuosly for all linebreaks.
    – mario
    May 20, 2011 at 0:49
  • perl -p -i -e 's/\r\n/\n/g' somefile.txt will convert the line endings if that's any use to you.
    – El Yobo
    May 20, 2011 at 1:10
  • 1
    Or you can sudo apt-get install dos2unix if you prefer; it will do the same thing.
    – El Yobo
    May 20, 2011 at 1:11
  • @El Yobo the perl thing did not work, did you put there all the parameters? Do I have to put the output of that thing into a new file, or it changes the input file itself? May 20, 2011 at 1:22
  • It changes the file directly. You can pass multiple file names at the same time to convert amny of them. How has it not worked, exactly? If the problem is only that the file has DOS format file endings rather than Unix format, the script will solve it, but it won't fix anything else. You could also try the dos2unix tool, but I suspect it's doing exactly the same thing on the inside.
    – El Yobo
    May 20, 2011 at 1:30

1 Answer 1

6

^M is not a newline. ^J is a newline. ^M is the character that Windows uses before a newline to show that it causes a line break. It is also called a "carriage return". The escape sequence for it is \r.

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  • 3
    To add to this, a profusion of ^Ms is frequently caused by ftp transferring a text file as binary from a Windows machine (which uses the ^M^J sequence at the end of each line) to a Unix machine (which uses only ^J). By using ASCII mode your ftp program will fix this up (but be careful, using ASCII mode on binary data will usually mangle it horribly).
    – Paul Z
    May 20, 2011 at 0:53

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