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Re: [Groff] Vim/formatting question (WordPerfect files)
From: |
Zvezdan Petkovic |
Subject: |
Re: [Groff] Vim/formatting question (WordPerfect files) |
Date: |
Tue, 13 Mar 2007 18:36:02 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.4.2.2i |
On Tue, Mar 13, 2007 at 03:15:08PM -0600, Clarke Echols wrote:
> Words are separated by a single character that displays in vim as
> a (blue) couple of characters: ( ~@ ) and there are other characters
> showing up as ( ^U, ^^, ^@, ) etc. I know how to do regular
> expression search and replace for control characters like ^U, but
> this ~@ stuff is something I don't know how to specify in a search
> string.
Select that blue character ~@ and save it in a file (say, tryme.txt).
Then run from a command line
od -x tryme.txt
See what hex code it is (for example, ^@ is 0d).
Then in Vim say
:%s/\%x0d/ /g
or whatever you want to replace it with instead of space.
> Any clues? Or an easy way to convert this to plain text without
> buying a bunch of software?
Take a look at
:help regex
in Vim for more regex features in Vim.
> I'm a vim/groff bigot and don't like canned "authoring" software--
> especially if I have to pay for it. :-)
I don't blame you. :-)
Best regards,
ZP