47

Suppose you have this file:

x
a
b
c
x
x
a
b
c
x
x

and you want to find the sequence abc (and select the whole 3 lines) with Notepad++ . How to express the newline in regex, please?

2
  • Make sure to switch matches newline option on as it was mentioned in this thread
    – clumsy
    Jan 16, 2014 at 21:23
  • 2
    @aljipa that option is not necessary, when newlines are expected in a specific place.
    – ANeves
    Feb 16, 2014 at 17:59

10 Answers 10

59

Notepad++ can do that comfortably, you don't even need regexes

In the find dialogue box look in the bottom left and switch your search mode to Extended which allows \n etc.

As odds on you're working on a file in windows format you'll be looking for \r\n (carriage return, newline)

a\r\nb\r\nc

Will find the pattern over three lines

4
  • 4
    oh.. well I've tried a\nb\nc .. forgot the carriage return. Thanks !
    – theSpyCry
    Dec 9, 2010 at 13:32
  • 1
    sometimes is needed searching newlines with regex (if you want to make more complex search including newlines). it is not possible as detailed in next answer
    – NeDark
    May 4, 2014 at 9:44
  • 1
    Note that I tried in vain to get newline characters working Notepad++ 5.9.3 using "Regular Expression" (rather than "Extended")! It works fine in Notepad++ 6.0 though - see darioo's answer below.
    – SharpC
    Mar 17, 2015 at 16:30
  • 1
    I don't think this is correct, question asked for regex, not extended mode. it is possible in regex \x0D is newline and \x0A is carriage return see answer stackoverflow.com/a/4398728/4459336 Dec 29, 2016 at 17:54
35

Update 18th June 2012

With the new Notepad++ v6, you can indeed search for newlines with regexes. So you can just use

a\r\nb\r\nc

even with regular expressions to accomplish what you want. Note \r\n is Windows encoding of line-breaks. In Unix files, its just \n.

Unfortunately, you can't do that in Notepad++ when using regex search. Notepad++ is based on the Scintilla editor component, which doesn't handle newlines in regex.

You can use extended search for newline searching, but I don't think that will help you search for 3 lines.

More info here.

Update: Robb and StartClass0830 were right about extended search. It does work, but not when using regular expressions search.

6
  • 1
    I think this answer is wrong. See Robb's answer and mine to verify that this answer is wrong. Dec 9, 2010 at 13:33
  • @StartClass0830: I've tried yours and Robb's answers and I can't get multiline matching to work. Edit: yep, it does work when using extended search. But not when using regular expressions. You were right.
    – darioo
    Dec 9, 2010 at 13:38
  • 1
    The assumption is the line ends with \r \n. Perhaps in your environment, the file has lines which end with \n only (without the \r). Dec 9, 2010 at 14:47
  • Anyways.. is there anything better than Notepad++ with full REGEX support ?
    – theSpyCry
    Dec 9, 2010 at 15:32
  • 1
    @PaN1C_Showt1Me: Well, there's always Vim and Emacs. I've used both and they really powerful regex support. But the learning curve always puts people off. I'd suggest you visit vim.org, download Vim and go through the tutorial before trying to do anything serious with it.
    – darioo
    Dec 9, 2010 at 21:51
14
^a\x0D\x0Ab\x0D\x0Ac

This will work \x0D is newline and \x0A is carriage return. Assumption is that each line in your file ends with ascii 10 and 13.

3
  • I add ^ for the beginning of line. Dec 9, 2010 at 13:34
  • 1
    This is what I always used. I don't know why this solution didn't get upvoted. It absolutely worked pre-v6
    – crush
    Oct 16, 2013 at 12:29
  • i like this solution since it allows the combination of regexes and newlines, and that's what I was searching for - searching for \n with regex selected won't do Aug 5, 2022 at 10:10
5

I found a workaround for this. Simply, in Extended mode replace all \r\n to a string that didn't exist in the rest of the document eg. ,,,newline,,, (watch out for special regexp chars like $, &, and *). Then switch to Regexp mode, do some replacements (now newline is ,,,newline,,,). Next, switch to Extended mode again and replace all ,,,newline,,, to \r\n.

2
  • This works fine on a small document. Tried it on a very large file (>1M lines). Notepad++ completely hanged (may be due to too less memory). The problem, with this method is: your whole document ends up on one line when replacing all new line characters.
    – Dave
    May 4, 2012 at 7:33
  • A potential modification to deal with a large document would be to close the document, and use Kuchara's pragmatic workaround using Replace In Files with a Directory and file name Filter that will only modify the intended file. Thus, no need to open the file in the Scintilla editor itself while the transformation is being done on the single line.
    – JMD
    Sep 28, 2012 at 21:58
2

For Notepad 6 and beyond, do this as a regular expression:

  • Select Search Mode > Regular expression (w/o . matches newline)
  • And in the Find what Textbox : a[\r\n]b[\r\n]+c[\r\n]

or if you are looking at the (Windows or Unix) file to see its line breaks as \r\n or \n then you may find it easier to use Extended Mode:

  • Select Search Mode > Extended (\n, \r, \t, \0, \x...)
  • And in the Find what Textbox for Windows: a\r\nb\r\nc\r\n
  • Or in the Find what Textbox for Unix: a\nb\nc\n

Wasn't clear if the OP intent is to select the trailing line return (after the 'c') as well, as would be necessary to remove the lines.

To not select the trailing line return, as appropriate for replacing with a non-empty string, simply remove the final line return from the matching statement.

Note that if there should be a match on the last line of the string, without a matching trailing line return, the match fails.

1
  • [\r\n]+ matches \r or \n or \r\n or \r\n\r\n\r\n. I just had lines ending with a bare \r in a paste from a webpage. I recall that's a Mac thing.
    – Bob Stein
    Jan 7 at 17:27
1

I have run accross this little issue when the document is windows CR/LF

If you click the box for . to match newlines you need .. to match CR/LF so if you have

<blah><blah>",
"<more><blah>

you need to use ",.." to match some string comma cr/lf another string

0

a\r\nb\r\nc works for me, but not ^a\x0D\x0Ab\x0D\x0Ac

Hmm, too bad that newline is not working with regular expressions. Now I have to go back to Textpad again. :(

0
0

Select Search Mode Which is Extended (\n, \r, \t, \0, \x...)

\n is new line and such This is Manuel

1
  • If your search string relies on regex, this is useless.
    – karatedog
    Sep 27, 2023 at 7:36
0

Find: "(^a.$)\r\n(b.)\r\n^(c.*)$" - pickup 3 whole lines, only storing data

Replace with: "\1\2\3" - Put down (replay) data

Works fine in Regex with Notepad++ v7.9.5

Place holders: ^ Start and $ End of line can be inside or out of ()store as shown, though clearly not necessary in given example. Note "[^x]" is different - here "^" is "NOT".

Advantage of storing and replay allows much more complicated pattern match without having to type in again what you want to end up with, and even change of replay: "\2\3\1" for "bca"

-4

In Notepad++ you can also try highlighting the desired part of the text and then pressing CTRL+J.

That would justify the text and thus removing all line endings.

1
  • 2
    How is that related to the question? Jan 12, 2013 at 0:28

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