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    How to find two or more non-consecutive tabs in a line?

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    • Alan KilbornA
      Alan Kilborn @glossar
      last edited by

      @glossar said:

      regex that locates a line that contains no tab?

      There might be better ones, but this one seems to work:

      ^((?!\t).)*$

      glossarG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • guy038G
        guy038
        last edited by guy038

        Hi, @glossar, @alan-kilborn, and All,

        A second solution could be :

        SEARCH (?-s)(?=.*\t.*\t).+

        A third solution could be, using the Mark dialog, w/o checking the Bookmark line option :

        MARK (?-s)\t.*\t


        Note, @alan-kilborn, that your regex should be changed into :

        SEARCH (?-s)^.*?\t[^\t\r\n]+\t.*?$

        To avoid wrong multi-lines match. However, this solution still misses some possibilities !


        You may test these 3 regexes, above, against the sample test, below :

        ---------------------------- 1 TEXT block without TAB -----> KO <----- ( because NO tabulation )
        abcd
        ---------------------------- 1 TAB  without TEXT ----------> KO <----- ( because ONE tabulation ONLY )
        	
        ---------------------------- 2 TABs without TEXT ----------- OK ------
        		
        ---------------------------- 3 TABs without TEXT ----------- OK ------
        			
        ---------------------------- 1 TAB  + 1 TEXT block --------> KO <----- ( because ONE tabulation ONLY )
        abcd	
        	abcd
        ---------------------------- 1 TAB  + 2 TEXT blocks -------> KO <----- ( because ONE tabulation ONLY )
        abcd	efgh
        ---------------------------- 2 TABs + 1 TEXT block --------- OK ------
        efgh		
        	efgh	
        		efgh
        ---------------------------- 2 TABs + 2 TEXT blocks -------- OK ------
        abcd	efgh	
        abcd		ijkm
        	efgh	ijkl
        ---------------------------- 2 TABs + 3 TEXT blocks -------- OK ------
        abcd	efgh	ijkl
        ---------------------------- 3 TABs + 1 Text block --------- OK ------
        abcd			
        	efgh		
        		ijkl	
        			mnop
        ---------------------------- 3 TABs + 2 Text blocks -------- OK ------
        abcd	efgh		
        abcd		ijkl	
        abcd			monp
        	efgh	ijkl	
        	efgh		monp
        		ijkl	monp
        ---------------------------- 3 TABs + 3 Text blocks -------- OK ------
        abcd	efgh	ijkm	
        	efgh	ijkl	mnop
        ---------------------------- 3 TABs + 4 Text blocks -------- OK ------
        abcd	efgh	ijkl	mnop
        

        Best Regards,

        guy038

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • PeterJonesP
          PeterJones
          last edited by PeterJones

          @glossar , @Alan-Kilborn , @Meta-Chuh , et alia,

          Unfortunately, the (?-s) only changes the behavior of . with respect to newlines; it doesn’t change character classes, so [^\t]+ means “one or more characters that don’t match a TAB, even if those characters are newlines”. By changing the full regex to (?-s)^.*?\t[^\t\r\n]+\t.*?$, I was able to get it to skip lines like @Meta-Chuh 's example of x instead of the TAB. The class [^\t\r\n] means “match one or more characters that isn’t any of TAB, CR (carriage return), or LF (line-feed)”

          I am not as regex expert as @guy038, so I may be misinterpreting; however, the boost docs say (emphasis mine)

          Escaped Characters
          All the escape sequences that match a single character, or a single character class are permitted within a character class definition. For example [[]] would match either of [ or ] while [\W\d] would match any character that is either a “digit”, or is not a “word” character.

          Since \R doesn’t match a “single character” (it can match a single character or a pair of characters more than one character, see boost’s “Matching Line Endings” section), it doesn’t fall within the allowable escape sequences permitted in the character class.

          edit: while typing this up, four more posts were made. Hopefully, I still added to the discussion.
          edit 2: clarify the \R

          Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
          • Alan KilbornA
            Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
            last edited by

            @PeterJones said:

            Hopefully, I still added to the discussion.

            You did, and you helped make it an “interesting discussion”. thanks.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • glossarG
              glossar
              last edited by

              Alan, the second one that finds no-tab :), works, thank you.

              Guy and Peter - Thank you for stepping-in! :) Much appreciated!

              Have a nice day!

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • guy038G
                guy038
                last edited by guy038

                Hi, @glossar, @alan-kilborn, @meta-chuh, @peterjones, and All,

                Here is an other solution, which looks for all contents of lines containing, at least , 2 tabulation chars ( can’t do shorter ! ) :

                SEARCH (?-s).*\t.*\t.*

                Just for information, an other formulation of the Alan’s regex, which searches lines which do not contain any tabulation char, could be :

                SEARCH (?!.*\t)^.+


                Negative character classes are often misunderstood, Indeed ! When you’re using, for instance, the negative class character below :

                [^<char1><char2><char3>-<char4>]

                It will match ANY Unicode character which is DIFFERENT from, either <char1>, <char2> and all characters between <char3> and <char4> included. So, most of the time, it probably matches the \r and \n END of Line characters. To avoid matching these line-break chars, just insert \r and \n, inside the negative class, at any location, after the ^, except in ranges :

                [^<char1>\n<char2>\t<char3>-<char4>]

                Cheers,

                guy038

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                • glossarG
                  glossar @Alan Kilborn
                  last edited by glossar

                  @Alan-Kilborn said:

                  @glossar said:

                  regex that locates a line that contains no tab?

                  There might be better ones, but this one seems to work:

                  ^((?!\t).)*$

                  Hi @alan-kilborn,
                  Is it possible for you to modify this regex so shat it should skip blank lines, i.e. the ones containing no characters at all, just (if applicable, ^ and) \r\n. Currently the regex finds blank lines as well since they , too, meet the criteria “no-tab”.

                  Thanks in advance!

                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • guy038G
                    guy038
                    last edited by guy038

                    Hi, @glossar, @alan-kilborn, @meta-chuh, @peterjones, and All,

                    I may be mistaken but I think that the regex (?!.*\t)^.+, of my previous post, just meet your needs, doesn’t it ?

                    Cheers,

                    guy038

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                    • Alan KilbornA
                      Alan Kilborn @glossar
                      last edited by

                      @glossar said:

                      Is it possible for you to modify this regex so shat it should skip blank lines

                      So we should look at what the original means:

                      ^((?!\t).)*$

                      It says (basically) to match zero or more occurrences (because of the use of *) of anything that is not TAB. If we change it to match ONE or more occurrences (we’re going to change * to + to do this) of anything that is not TAB). Because we have to match at least ONE thing, empty/blank lines are no longer matched:

                      ^((?!\t).)+$

                      Which is basically what @guy038 said, but I wanted to elaborate a bit!

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • guy038G
                        guy038
                        last edited by

                        Hi, @glossar, @alan-kilborn, @meta-chuh, @peterjones and All,

                        Fundamentally, the new Alan’s solution and mine give the same right results, i.e. to match any non-empty line which does not contain a tabulation character !

                        By the way, we, both, forget to add the leading in-line-modifier (?-s) to be sure that, even you previously ticked the . matches newline option, the regex engine will suppose that any . char does match a single standard character, only !

                        So, our two solutions should be :

                        Alan : (?-s)^((?!\t).)+$

                        Guy : (?-s)(?!.*\t)^.+


                        However, note that the logic, underlying these 2 regular expressions, is a bit different :

                        • In the Alan’s regex, from beginning of line ( ^ ), the regex engine matches for one or more standard characters, till the end of line ( $ ), ONLY IF each standard character encountered is not a tabulation character, due to the negative look-ahead (?!\t), located right before the . regex character

                        • In the Guy’s regex, the regex engine matches for all the standard characters of a line, ( ^.+ ), ONLY IF ( implicitly at beginning of line ) it cannot find a tabulation character further on, at any position of current line, due to the negative look-ahead (?!.*\t)

                        I did a test with a file of 2,500,000 lines, half of which contained 1 tabulation character and, clearly, the Alan’s version is faster ! ( 2 mn 15 s for Alan instead of 5mn for my version )

                        BR

                        guy038

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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