92

I want to remove trailing white spaces and tabs from my code without removing empty lines.

I tried:

\s+$

and:

([^\n]*)\s+\r\n

But they all removed empty lines too. I guess \s matches end-of-line characters too.


UPDATE (2016):

Nowadays I automate such code cleaning by using Sublime's TrailingSpaces package, with custom/user setting:

"trailing_spaces_trim_on_save": true

It highlights trailing white spaces and automatically trims them on save.

4

11 Answers 11

172

Try just removing trailing spaces and tabs:

[ \t]+$
8
  • 1
    How would I exclude lines which contain only whitespaces, tabs or a mixture of them?
    – Daniel F
    Jun 5, 2013 at 10:14
  • 3
    @DanielF. ([^ \t])[ \t]+$, but you'd have to replace with \1 instead of an empty string.
    – KOVIKO
    Jan 4, 2014 at 13:49
  • 1
    @DanielF. The regex I posted looks for non-space characters preceding the space characters, and preserves the non-space characters with the \1 replacement. Lines that consist of only space characters will not match this regex and will be skipped.
    – KOVIKO
    Jan 7, 2014 at 4:06
  • 6
    @DanielF. In my case, I was using a text editor (Notepad++) that counts each line as a string, not the entire document as a string. As such, newline characters are ignored. To handle the case where newline characters are not ignored, simply add them to the regex: ([^ \t\r\n])[ \t]+$
    – KOVIKO
    Jan 8, 2014 at 15:30
  • 3
    @Koviko: Since your comment is the correct solution to the problem and the answer you've commented on is not, I suggest you post that regex as a separate answer. Your comment is valuable, but easy to miss. Jan 28, 2014 at 0:50
38

To remove trailing whitespace while also preserving whitespace-only lines, you want the regex to only remove trailing whitespace after non-whitespace characters. So you need to first check for a non-whitespace character. This means that the non-whitespace character will be included in the match, so you need to include it in the replacement.

Regex: ([^ \t\r\n])[ \t]+$

Replacement: \1 or $1, depending on the IDE

7
  • 1
    Awesome. Thank you. Also, the same regex technique modified to use a lookbehind assertion: (?<![ \t\r\n])[ \t]+$ (replacement pattern should just be blank). Mar 3, 2015 at 20:21
  • What platform uses "\1" as replacement? May 31, 2015 at 15:13
  • 2
    @PeterMortensen Notepad++, for one.
    – KOVIKO
    May 31, 2015 at 15:14
  • 1
    @PeterMortensen sed too.
    – ocodo
    May 27, 2018 at 13:11
  • 1
    This is a built-in function in Notepad++: Menu EditBlank OperationsTrim Trailing Space Jul 3, 2019 at 23:26
19

The platform is not specified, but in C# (.NET) it would be:

Regular expression (presumes the multiline option - the example below uses it):

    [ \t]+(\r?$)

Replacement:

    $1

For an explanation of "\r?$", see Regular Expression Options, Multiline Mode (MSDN).

Code example

This will remove all trailing spaces and all trailing TABs in all lines:

string inputText = "     Hello, World!  \r\n" +
                   "  Some other line\r\n" +
                   "     The last line  ";
string cleanedUpText = Regex.Replace(inputText,
                                     @"[ \t]+(\r?$)", @"$1",
                                     RegexOptions.Multiline);
2
  • 1
    The regular expressions in the other two answers do not work in .NET (they don't result in any replacement - the text is left unchanged). Jun 1, 2015 at 17:11
  • 1
    This also works in Xcode and Swift. Thumbs way up. Thank you. Mar 7, 2021 at 8:18
4

Regex to find trailing and leading whitespaces:

^[ \t]+|[ \t]+$
1
  • Can you provide some context? Where and how did you test it? Mar 4, 2020 at 19:43
3

If using Visual Studio 2012 and later (which uses .NET regular expressions), you can remove trailing whitespace without removing blank lines by using the following regex

Replace (?([^\r\n])\s)+(\r?\n)

With $1

Enter image description here


Some explanation

The reason you need the rather complicated expression is that the character class \s matches spaces, tabs and newline characters, so \s+ will match a group of lines containing only whitespace. It doesn't help adding a $ termination to this regex, because this will still match a group of lines containing only whitespace and newline characters.

You may also want to know (as I did) exactly what the (?([^\r\n])\s) expression means. This is an Alternation Construct, which effectively means match to the whitespace character class if it is not a carriage return or linefeed.

Alternation constructs normally have a true and false part,

(?( expression ) yes | no )

but in this case the false part is not specified.

3

[ |\t]+$ with an empty replace works.

\s+($) with a $1 replace also works, at least in Visual Studio Code...

0

To remove trailing white space while ignoring empty lines I use positive look-behind:

(?<=\S)\s+$

The look-behind is the way go to exclude the non-whitespace (\S) from the match.

2
  • 2
    This matches empty lines. The match will start at the end of a non-empty line, but it will include any empty lines that follow.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 9, 2016 at 9:31
  • What platform did you use? Perl? Jun 9, 2016 at 11:39
0

To remove any blank trailing spaces use this:

\n|^\s+\n

I tested in the Atom and Xcode editors.

2
  • What replacement character did you use? $1? Or something else? Mar 7, 2021 at 21:10
  • An empty string as the replacement? Apr 28, 2021 at 21:52
0

Strangely, I could not get the /[\t ]+$/m to work in PHP. I tried variants of the other answers here, but still failed.

So, I went with this replacement instead:

<?php
$contents = preg_replace('/[\t ]+(\v)/', '$1', $contents);
-1

In Java:



String str = "    hello world  ";

// prints "hello world" 
System.out.println(str.replaceAll("^(\\s+)|(\\s+)$", ""));


1
  • 1
    The OP didn't want to remove leading spaces.
    – Armali
    Jan 29, 2019 at 6:55
-4

You can simply use it like this:

var regex = /( )/g;

Sample: click here

2
  • Hi @PeterMortensen, it will remove all white spaces Mar 19, 2019 at 5:22
  • And what was the question? Mar 7, 2021 at 21:09

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.