I have a .txt
file named COPYING which is edited on windows.
$ file COPYING
COPYING: ASCII English text, with CRLF line terminators
I tried to convert it to Unix style using dos2unix
. Below is the output :
$ dos2unix COPYING
dos2unix: Skipping binary file COPYING
I was surprised to find that the dos2unix
program reports it as a binary file. Then using some other editor (not Emacs) I found that the file contains a control character. I am interested in finding all the invisible characters in the file using Emacs.
By googling, I have found the following solution which uses tr
:
tr -cd '\11\12\40-\176' < file_name
How can I do the same in a开发者_运维问答n Emacs way? I tried the Hexl mode. The Hexl mode shows text and their corresponding ASCII values in a single buffer which is great. How do I find the characters which have ASCII values other than 11-12, 40-176 (i.e tab, space, and visible characters)? I tried to create a regular expression for that search, but it is quite complicated.
To see invisible characters, you can try whitespace-mode
. Spaces and tabs will be displayed with a symbol in a different face. If the coding system is automatically being detected as dos (showing (DOS)
on the status bar), carriage returns at the end of a line will be hidden as well. Run revert-buffer-with-coding-system
to switch it to Unix or binary (e.g. C-x RET r unix) and they'll always show up as ^M
. The binary coding system will display any non-ASCII characters as control characters as well.
Emacs won't hide any character by default. Press Ctrl+Meta+%, or Esc then Ctrl+% if the former is too hard on your fingers, or M-x replace-regexp RET
if you prefer. Then, for the regular expression, enter
[^@-^H^K-^_^?]
However, where I wrote ^H
, type Ctrl+Q then Ctrl+H, to enter a “control-H” character literally, and similarly for the others. You can press Ctrl+Q then Ctrl+Space for ^@
, and usually Ctrl+Q then Backspace for ^?
. Replace all occurrences of this regular expression by the empty string.
Since you have the file open in Emacs, you can change its line endings while you're at it. Press C-x RET f
(Ctrl+X Return F) and enter us-ascii-unix
as the new desired encoding for the file.
Check out M-x set-buffer-file-coding-system
. From the documentation:
(set-buffer-file-coding-system CODING-SYSTEM &optional FORCE NOMODIFY)
Set the file coding-system of the current buffer to CODING-SYSTEM. This means that when you save the buffer, it will be converted according to CODING-SYSTEM. For a list of possible values of CODING-SYSTEM, use M-x list-coding-systems.
So, going from DOS to UNIX, M-x set-buffer-file-coding-system unix
.
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