Gedit
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| By default gedit displays both windows and unix linebreaks properly, but it creates unix linebreaks. This can even give a resulting file with a mix of windows and unix linebreaks. It can be a problem if you e.g. want to create .bat files on linux and execute them on windows. | By default gedit displays both windows and unix linebreaks properly, but it creates unix linebreaks. This can even give a resulting file with a mix of windows and unix linebreaks. It can be a problem if you e.g. want to create .bat files on linux and execute them on windows. But it's possible to convert all linebreaks in a file to windows linebreaks, by enabling the external tools plugin and using a simple script. |
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| It's possible to convert all linebreaks in a file to windows linebreaks, by enabling the external tools plugin and using this script: |
Script for converting all linebreaks to windows linebreaks: |
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| This can convert all linebreaks to unix linebreaks: |
Script for converting all linebreaks to unix linebreaks: |
Windows linebreaks
By default gedit displays both windows and unix linebreaks properly, but it creates unix linebreaks. This can even give a resulting file with a mix of windows and unix linebreaks. It can be a problem if you e.g. want to create .bat files on linux and execute them on windows. But it's possible to convert all linebreaks in a file to windows linebreaks, by enabling the external tools plugin and using a simple script.
Script for converting all linebreaks to windows linebreaks:
s/\r//g s/$//g s/$/\r/
Script for converting all linebreaks to unix linebreaks:
s/\r//g s/$//g
Gedit (last edited 2008-10-14 13:05:35 by 84-73-45-14)