201

I have the following data, and I need to put it all into one line.

I have this:

22791

;

14336

;

22821

;

34653

;

21491

;

25522

;

33238

;

I need this:

22791;14336;22821;34653;21491;25522;33238;

EDIT

None of these commands is working perfectly.

Most of them let the data look like this:

22791

;14336

;22821

;34653

;21491

;25522
1
  • 20
    Copy-paste into the browser's address bar or another text field. Quick'n'dirty but works for small amounts of data.
    – ignis
    Feb 20, 2013 at 14:58

21 Answers 21

360
tr --delete '\n' < yourfile.txt
tr -d '\n' < yourfile.txt

If none of the commands posted here are working, then you have something other than a newline separating your fields. Possibly you have DOS/Windows line endings in the file (although I would expect the Perl solutions to work even in that case)?

Try:

tr -d "\n\r" < yourfile.txt

If that doesn't work then you're going to have to inspect your file more closely (e.g., in a hex editor) to find out what characters are actually in there that you want to remove.

5
  • 15
    How do you write this output to the same or another file? Sep 30, 2016 at 0:30
  • 3
    I think tr is not suitable for empty lines. What do you think? - - I think sed is the best option like described here stackoverflow.com/q/16414410/54964 Nov 5, 2016 at 13:23
  • To route the output to another file just use output redirection. To route it to the same file pipe it to "sponge" (available in the "moreutils" package on Debian base systems).
    – plugwash
    Feb 29, 2020 at 12:51
  • 2
    To write the output to the same file, use a subshell echo -n $(tr -d "\n" < yourfile.txt) > yourfile.txt Aug 5, 2020 at 8:07
  • @andpei Thanks very much for that and here is a simple shell script that takes the file name ($1) and does the same work: echo -n $(tr -d "\n" < $1) > $1 Put it in a removeNL.sh file & chmod 777 and run it $ ./removeNL yourfile.txt
    – raddevus
    Nov 16, 2021 at 20:58
23
tr -d '\n' < file.txt

Or

awk '{ printf "%s", $0 }' file.txt

Or

sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n//g' file.txt

This page here has a bunch of other methods to remove newlines.

0
14
perl -p -i -e 's/\R//g;' filename

Must do the job.

2
  • Golfs to perl -pie 's/\R//g' filename
    – Trenton
    Sep 23, 2019 at 17:33
  • 1
    No, the -i takes an argument, so it can't be smushed up to -e: perl -i -pe ... Nov 24, 2021 at 16:06
12

Expanding on a previous answer, this removes all new lines and saves the result to a new file (thanks to @tripleee):

tr -d '\n' < yourfile.txt > yourfile2.txt

Which is better than a "useless cat" (see comments):

cat file.txt | tr -d '\n' > file2.txt

Also useful for getting rid of new lines at the end of the file, e.g., created by using echo blah > file.txt.

Note that the destination filename is different, important, otherwise you'll wipe out the original content!

4
  • That's a useless cat. Several comment threads here already explain how to redirect the result to a new file.
    – tripleee
    Jan 4, 2021 at 12:30
  • 1
    Thanks for pointing that out, I just saw a comment with echo -n $(tr -d "\n" < yourfile.txt) > yourfile.txt but hadn't seen it before.
    – Nagev
    Jan 5, 2021 at 12:49
  • 2
    That's even more convoluted, with the well-known portability issues around echo -n. The simple obvious idiomatic way to do that is tr -d '\n' <file.txt >file2.txt
    – tripleee
    Jan 5, 2021 at 12:56
  • 1
    We need to pay attention to not use the same filename for reading and writing, otherwise the file will be empty.
    – baptx
    Jul 1, 2021 at 16:23
11
paste -sd "" file.txt
3
  • 1
    On Solaris (10) paste -sd "" doesn't work on STDIN by default, so if you're piping to it, use: (some command) | paste -sd "" -
    – JohnGH
    Jul 29, 2013 at 9:32
  • 1
    This does not work if you also want to remove the final newline. It only removes intermediate newlines.
    – josch
    Sep 1, 2017 at 14:11
  • This didn't work on Mac OS, Sundeep's version did. paste -sd'\0' -
    – Trenton
    Sep 23, 2019 at 17:31
7

You can edit the file in vim:

$ vim inputfile
:%s/\n//g
2
  • 2
    and to replace with with spaces : :%s/\n/ /g Jan 18, 2019 at 14:39
  • This worked the best for me.
    – JayRugMan
    Nov 5, 2022 at 17:59
5

Use

head -n 1 filename | od -c

to figure what the offending character is.

Then use

tr -d '\n' <filename

for LF, and

tr -d '\r\n' <filename

for CRLF.

4

Use sed with POSIX classes

This will remove all lines containing only whitespace (spaces & tabs)

sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d'

Just take whatever you are working with and pipe it to that

Example

cat filename | sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d'

1
  • sed -i '/^[[:space:]]*$/d' filename ...for in place editing; answer as above will output to the screen Jul 5, 2019 at 16:56
3

I was having the same case today. It is super easy in Vim or Neovim, and you can use gJ to join lines. For your use case, just do

99gJ

This will join all your 99 lines. You can adjust the number 99 as needed according to how many lines to join. If just joining one line, then only gJ is good enough.

2

Using man 1 ed:

# cf. http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/doku.php?id=howto:edit-ed 
ed -s file <<< $'1,$j\n,p'  # print to stdout 
ed -s file <<< $'1,$j\nwq'  # in-place edit
2

Nerd fact: use ASCII instead.

tr -d '\012' < filename.extension   

(Edited cause i didn't see the friggin' answer that had same solution, only difference was that mine had ASCII)

2

Using the gedit text editor (3.18.3)

  1. Click Search
  2. Click Find and Replace...
  3. Enter \n\s into Find field
  4. Leave Replace with blank (nothing)
  5. Check Regular expression box
  6. Click the Find button

Note: this doesn't exactly address the OP's original, 7 year old problem but should help some noob linux users (like me) who find their way here from the SE's with similar "how do I get my text all on one line" questions.

2

xargs consumes newlines as well (but adds a final trailing newline):

xargs < file.txt | tr -d ' '
1

If the data is in file.txt, then:

echo $(<file.txt) | tr -d ' '

The '$(<file.txt)' reads the file and gives the contents as a series of words which 'echo' then echoes with a space between them. The 'tr' command then deletes any spaces:

22791;14336;22821;34653;21491;25522;33238;
1
  • This works as long as the input is not too big and as long as you're using Bash (tagged for Bash, so that's OK). Were I writing the answer now, it would be tr -d '\n' < file.txt, which is what the accepted answer does (and I'm surprised I didn't write it at the time). This was probably just written to show 'yet another way to do it'. Sep 5, 2015 at 15:41
1

I usually get this use case when I'm copying a code snippet from a file and I want to paste it into a console without adding unnecessary new lines, I ended up doing a Bash alias (I called it oneline if you are curious)

xsel -b -o | tr -d '\n' | tr -s ' ' | xsel -b -i
  • xsel -b -o reads my clipboard

  • tr -d '\n' removes new lines

  • tr -s ' ' removes recurring spaces

  • xsel -b -i pushes this back to my clipboard

after that I would paste the new contents of the clipboard into one line in a console or whatever.

1

Assuming you only want to keep the digits and the semicolons, the following should do the trick assuming there are no major encoding issues, though it will also remove the very last "newline":

tr -cd ";0-9"

You can easily modify the above to include other characters, e.g. if you want to retain decimal points, commas, etc.

1
perl -0777 -pe 's/\n+//g' input >output
perl -0777 -pe 'tr/\n//d' input >output
0

I would do it with awk, e.g.

awk '/[0-9]+/ { a = a $0 ";" } END { print a }' file.txt

(a disadvantage is that a is "accumulated" in memory).

EDIT

Forgot about printf! So also

awk '/[0-9]+/ { printf "%s;", $0 }' file.txt

or likely better, what it was already given in the other ans using awk.

0

You are missing the most obvious and fast answer especially when you need to do this in GUI in order to fix some weird word-wrap.

  • Open gedit

  • Then Ctrl + H, then put in the Find textbox \n and in Replace with an empty space then fill checkbox Regular expression and voila.

-1

To also remove the trailing newline at the end of the file

python -c "s=open('filename','r').read();open('filename', 'w').write(s.replace('\n',''))"
1
  • The tags suggest the OP is looking for a shell-based solution. (FWIW, I personally understand the appeal of Python for these use cases)
    – David J.
    Aug 30, 2021 at 17:33
-1

The fastest way I found:

  1. open Vim by doing this in your command line
  2. vim inputfile
  3. press ":" and input the following command to remove all newlines
  4. :%s/\n//g
  5. Input this to also remove spaces in case some characters were spaces :%s/ //g
  6. make sure to save by writing to the file with
  7. :w

The same format can be used to remove any other characters, and you can use a website like

https://apps.timwhitlock.info/unicode/inspect

to figure out what character you're missing.

You can also use this to figure out other characters you can't see and they have a tool as well.

Tool to learn of other invisible characters

1
  • 2
    Original question has the sed tag; needs a way for automating work, not to do that by hand
    – pierpy
    Dec 11, 2022 at 7:07

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