Yes, notepad is strange. Why not use wordpad?
Jos 

-----Original Message-----
From: racket-users@googlegroups.com [mailto:racket-users@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Josh English
Sent: martes, 06 de octubre de 2015 6:06
To: Racket Users
Subject: [racket-users] Re: Writing text to a file with correct newlines

On Monday, October 5, 2015 at 2:04:16 AM UTC-7, Paolo Giarrusso wrote:
> On Monday, October 5, 2015 at 1:07:31 AM UTC+2, Josh English wrote:
> > I am trying to learn Racket by creating a Todo manager based on the
Todo.txt format by Gina Trapani (http://todotxt.com/)
> > 
> > I also have an Android tablet that uses a todo.txt application. This
application uses "\n\r" at the end of each line. I'm on Windows 7, so I need
this newline to work as well, because if I open the file up in Notepad, it
messes up my lines and my todos (normally one per line) become one
multi-line todo.
> > 
> > The program reads the text file using file->lines and filters any blank
lines.
> > 
> > The program writes the text file and I manually write the "\n\r" using
write, display, and print. That is to say, I've tried all three and ended up
with extra "\n" characters.
> > 
> > Here is a snippet from my do-task procedure:
> > 
> >  (with-output-to-file (task-file-path) #:mode 'text #:exists
'truncate/replace
> >     (lambda ()
> >     (write (string-join (drop-right uptos 1) "\n\r"))
> >     (write "\n\r")
> >     (write (complete-task (last uptos) (rest taskstuff)))
> >     (write "\n\r")
> >     (write (string-join afters "\n\r")))))  
> > 
> > When I open the file with SciTe, it shows the CR and LF characters at
the end of each line, plus a blank line with a CR character.
> > 
> > The complite-task procedure transforms a task and returns a trimmed
string.
> > 
> > Where is this extra blank line coming from?
> > 
> > Full draft code at http://pastebin.com/z3C5BQJP
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > 
> > Josh
> 
> It's from #:mode 'text, that translates \n to \r\n: this way, programs can
end the line with \n on all platforms, yet produce the right end-of-line on
Windows. This behavior is copied from the C libraries. BTW, are you sure you
want \n\r? That means LF CR, while on Windows you want \r\n.
> 
> To sum up: You can either use #:mode 'text and just use \n (which will
produce native end-of-lines, hence will produce the format you want only on
Windows) *or* specify #:mode 'binary and use \r\n (not \n\r), which will
produce the same result on whatever platform.
> 
> Sources:
> 1. Following with-output-to-file docs shows that open-output-file
>
http://docs.racket-lang.org/reference/file-ports.html?q=open-output-file%09#
%28def._%28%28lib._racket%2Fprivate%2Fbase..rkt%29._open-output-file%29%29
> 2. For background on escape sequences and behavior on Windows, one
starting point is here:
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escape_sequences_in_C#Table_of_escape_sequence
s
> For the equivalent of the behavior above, see docs for fopen on Windows,
in particular text and binary modes.
> 
> Cheers,
> Paolo

Paolo,

Thanks for the information. It seems that the Android App handles a plain
'\n' newline just fine. It's only when I read the file in Notepad that
things get strange.

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