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Date:      Tue, 16 Feb 1999 10:37:40 +1100
From:      Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au>
To:        Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
Cc:        rick hamell <hamellr@dsinw.com>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: cleaning a text file
Message-ID:  <19990216103740.60271@welearn.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <19990216095232.J2207@lemis.com>; from Greg Lehey on Tue, Feb 16, 1999 at 09:52:32AM %2B1030
References:  <19990215201056.19929@welearn.com.au> <Pine.BSF.3.91.990215010943.20451F-100000@dsinw.com> <19990216095232.J2207@lemis.com>

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On Tue, Feb 16, 1999 at 09:52:32AM +1030, Greg Lehey wrote:
> On Monday, 15 February 1999 at  1:10:36 -0800, rick hamell wrote:
> >
> >> Also, this file has some very long lines which would get truncated
> >> or unexpectedly wrapped when sent as email. And if there is something
> >> strange, I have to read it and guess what it should have been.
> >>
> >> Maybe someone will come up with something for this particular case.
> >> I can't believe there's not some little untility for this that's been
> >> hanging around unloved for years.
> >
> > 	Oy! Ok... how does Greg reformat all those emails?
> 
> With Emacs.  I have a collection of macros which I'm constantly
> changing to catch up with new tricks that mailers discover.
> 
> To Sue's original question: it depends on what your text looks like.
> tr(1) will remove characters if you ask it to.

If I knew which characters were there (so I could ask tr to remove
them) I would have already removed them with my text editor.

>  fmt(1) might be useful for wrapping lines.

I don't see the long line lengths as a big problem at this stage, but
fmt might be useful later.

The problem is that I don't know which funny characters exist in the
file, if any. I want to find out what they are, so I can search for
them and eyeball them before killing them.


Just knowing which characters they are would give me many solutions
immediately. There still doesn't seem to be a way to find this out :-(

Maybe there's a long way... somehow put a linefeed after each character
in the file (with sed?) and then sort it and look at the top and bottom
of the sorted file.

-- 

Regards,
        -*Sue*-


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