Hi Sven,
Is it possible that you did a case insensitive search (the "Case sensitive"
check box was unchecked in the Find window)?
In this case it is not a bug but simply Unicode case conversion, your regex
finds the "lowercase" version of this two Unicode character:
Unicode Character âKâ
hmm - in a shell like bash you would do something like
for FILENAME in ls * do
unixcommandline $FILENAME ;
done
It can get messier, but if all the files (and only the files) are in a
directory this would be simplest.
On Friday, April 30, 2021 at 7:05:27 AM UTC-7 Patrick Woolsey wrote:
> Per
Per item 2. this sounds like a job for either the Text -> Apply Text Transform
command or a _text factory_ with a suitable 'Run Unix Filter' action.
Per item 1. you can catenate any selectable set of files into an existing
document via the Edit -> Insert -> File Contents... command
Regards,
On Apr 30, 2021, at 04:37, Sven Berg Ryen wrote:
>
> I was going to run a regular expression on a large document.
> What I wanted to extract was lines matching [\x{007f}-\x{}], also known
> as high or extended ASCII.
>
> When I search for that pattern in the document, however, it also
I have a folder on my Mac with multiple text files. I need to run the same
Unix command line, which I have, on all of them. I would like to do all of
them at the same time.
Can I do either of the following using BBEdit (vers. 13.5.6)?
1. Combine all the files into one text file.
2. From
Hi!
I was going to run a regular expression on a large document.
What I wanted to extract was lines matching [\x{007f}-\x{}], also known
as high or extended ASCII.
When I search for that pattern in the document, however, it also oddly
matches the characters "s" and "k", which according to