What if I have a record in a otherwise good file that had a carriage return in it.
Ex:
1,2,3,4,5 ^M
,6,7,8,9,10
and I wanted to make it
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
What if I have a record in a otherwise good file that had a carriage return in it.
Ex:
1,2,3,4,5 ^M
,6,7,8,9,10
and I wanted to make it
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
In general, if you have a string with a stray newline at the end that you want to get rid of, you can use chomp
on it (note that you can pass it an lvalue, so wrapping it around an assignment is legal):
my $string = $string2 = "blah\n";
chomp $string;
# this works too:
chomp(my $string3 = $string2);
Note that if the string has a trailing "\r\n"
, chomp won't take the \r
as well, unless you modify $/
.
So if all of that is too complicated, and you need to remove all occurrences of \n
, \r\n
and \r
(maybe you're processing lines from a variety of architectures all at once?), you can fall back to good old tr
:
$string =~ tr/\r\n//d;
if ($line =~ /\r/) { chomp $line; $line .= <$infile>; }
to read in the next line and concatenate to the first.
$string =~ tr/\r\n//d;
is that it will remove all occurrences of \r\n
everywhere and not only the one at the end of the string.
Say we have a file that contains a ctrl-M (aka \r
on some platforms):
$ cat input 1,2,3 4,5,6 ,7,8,9 10,11,12
This is explicit with od
:
$ od -c input 0000000 1 , 2 , 3 \n 4 , 5 , 6 \r \n , 7 , 0000020 8 , 9 \n 1 0 , 1 1 , 1 2 \n 0000035
Remove each offending character and join its line with the next by running
$ perl -pe 's/\cM\cJ?//g' input 1,2,3 4,5,6,7,8,9 10,11,12
or redirect to a new file with
$ perl -pe 's/\cM\cJ?//g' input >updated-input
or overwrite it in place (plus a backup in input.bak
) with
$ perl -i.bak -pe 's/\cM\cJ?//g' input
Making the \cJ
optional handles the case when a file ends with ctrl-M but not ctrl-J.
s/[\r\n]//g
Only do this if you want to combine a line with the next.
Assuming the carriage return is right before the line feed:
perl -pi.bak -e 's/\r\n//' your_file_name
This will join only lines with a carriage return at the end of the line to the next line.
Every line is ended with some terminator sequence, either
If some lines are OK, you should say from wich system the file comes or on wich system the perl script is executed, or the risk is to remove every end of line and merge all of your program lines...
As ^M is the CR character, if you see such a character at the end of a line and nothing special on other lines, you are probably using some kind of Unix (Linux ?) and some copy/paste has polluted one line with an additional \r at the end of line.
if this is the case :
perl -pi -e 's/\r\n$//g' filetomodify
will do the trick and merge only the line containing both CR and LF with the next line, leaving the other lines untounhed.
More information is needed about the underlying data and what your definition of carriage return
is. Is the data in Linux or Windows? Really, do you mean carriage return/line feed, or just line feed?
$text =~ tr/\r//;
→ this is the fastest method to weed out carriage returns$text =~ tr/\n//;
→ this is the fastest method to change newlines$test =~ s/\n//s;
→ this is probably what you're looking for, which makes the text appear as one line and removes the internal \n
tr///
operations will do anything at all, and the /s
modifier on s///
has no effect, and it will remove exactly one newline.
tr/\n/\0/;
Perhaps I was introducing some clever trick, which hasn't stood the test of time, or even the changes of SO? -- your guess is as good as mine.
/s
) -- I believe I had inserted that in case he planned to do anything with the wildcard .
match, thinking that it would be something for him to look up if he didn't understand it. It's obvious a question like this for someone new to regex, so I took the liberty of inserting some educational curiosities for him to look up at a later time.