I'm cleaning up some code files (C#) and want to remove the regions. And I would like to delete all the lines that have the string '#region'. That's just an example, and I can think of several more uses, but is that even possible?
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2I am tempted to vote this question to be off topic ... It's mainly a question on notepad++ and specific working pattern, but not necessarily programming related :/– user57508Commented Dec 9, 2014 at 14:44
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@AndreasNiedermair agree– Stefan FalkCommented Dec 9, 2014 at 14:54
8 Answers
Notepad++ v6.5
Search menu -> Find... -> Mark tab -> Find what: your search text, check Bookmark Line, then Mark All. This will bookmark all the lines with the search term, you'll see the blue circles in the margin.
Then Search menu -> Bookmark -> Remove Bookmarked Lines. This will delete all the bookmarked lines.
You can also use a regex to search. This method won't result in a blank line like John's and will actually delete the line.
Older Versions
- Search menu -> Find... -> Find what: your search text, check Bookmark Line and click Find All.
- Then Search -> Bookmark -> Remove Bookmarked Lines
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9Thank you! Wow, I wasn't aware that NP++ did this.. a great time saver. Find & bookmark lines + delete lines. Awesome. Thank you!! Commented Dec 6, 2010 at 16:26
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15This is one of those little gems I find where i wish I could upvote more than 1. I can't tell you how much time I've wasted over the years never realizing this was available! Only problem is now I guess I need to be more productive...– MilnerCommented May 7, 2012 at 15:42
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3If you're searching for this. 'Mark' has its own tab now on the Search popup menu. Commented Oct 15, 2013 at 21:24
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1@bunnybare, thanks. I updated the answer for the latest version.– RayCommented Oct 16, 2013 at 23:15
You can use menu Search -> Replace... (Ctrl + H).
It has a regular expression feature for replacing. You can use a regex that matches #region as well as whatever else is on the line, and replace it with empty space.
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Thanks, I did that and it works. But now I'm trying to replace \n\n with just one \n but doesn't seem to work, any ideas?– RismoCommented May 27, 2009 at 21:59
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1use extended search for replacing escape sequences (radio button just above regex)– user36457Commented May 27, 2009 at 22:05
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Thanks John. I did that and works for one line break \n, but not for two. I'm searching for \n\n and replacing it with \n, but it doesn't work. Does it work for you ?– RismoCommented May 27, 2009 at 22:07
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1If you typed the document on windows, line endings will be \r\n. UNIX style line endings are \n.– user36457Commented May 27, 2009 at 22:12
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5Also just noticed that TextFx -> TextFx Edit -> Delete Surplus Blank Lines does the same :)– RismoCommented May 27, 2009 at 22:25
This is the most common feature of Notepad++ that I use to update my code.
All you need to do is:
- Select common string that is present in all lines.
- Press Ctrl + F
- In the Mark tab, paste the recurring string and check the Bookmark line checkbox.
- Click on Mark All
- Now go to menu Search → Bookmark → Remove Bookmarked Lines
You can refer to this link for pictorial explanation.
http://www.downloadorinstall.com/best-notepad-tips-and-tricks-for-faster-work-and-development/
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The link seems to be broken (or perhaps require a scary amount of JavaScript code to use). Commented Jul 1, 2019 at 22:13
Here is a way that removes the lines containing "YOURTEXT" completely:
- Open the Replace dialog
- Enter the following search string:
.*YOURTEXT.*[\r]?[\n]
(replace YOURTEXT with your text) - Enable "Regular expression"
- Disable ". matches newline"
The given regular expression matches both Windows and Unix end of lines.
If your text contains characters that have a special meaning for regular expression, like the backslash, you will need to escape them.
Jacob's reply to John T works perfectly to delete the whole line, and you can Find in Files with that. Make sure to check "Regular expression" at bottom.
Solution: ^.*#region.*$
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2he said he wants to delete the line, not replace it with something– felickzCommented Oct 7, 2011 at 12:52
Investigate what is your EOL, \n or \r\n. Then replace .*#region.*\r\n
with nothing in regexpr mode.
You can try doing a replace of #region with \n, turning extended search mode on.
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2OP said he wanted to "delete all the lines" , you would be replacing it with a new line– felickzCommented Oct 7, 2011 at 12:49
Using regex and find&replace, you can delete all the lines containing #region without leaving empty lines.
Because for some reason Ray's method didn't work on my machine I searched for (.*#region.*\n)|(\n.*#region.*)
and left the replace box empty.
That regex ensures that the if #region
is found on the first line, the ending newline is deleted, and if it is found on the last line the preceding newline is deleted.
Still, Ray's solution is the better one if it works for you.