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I have a list (in a .txt file) which I'd like to quickly convert to JavaScript Syntax, so I want to take the following:

AliceBlue
AntiqueWhite
Aqua
Aquamarine
Azure
Beige
Bisque
Black
BlanchedAlmond

and convert it to an array literal...

var myArray = ["AliceBlue", "AntiqueWhite", ... ]

I have the list in notepad++ and I need a reg expression to add the " at the start of the line and ", at the end and remove the line break... does anyone have a quick fix to do this? I'm terrible with RegEx.

I often have to perform such tasks so to know how to do this would be a great benefit to me. Many thanks

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3 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted

You won't be able to do it in a single replacement; you'll have to perform a few steps. Here's how I'd do it:

  1. Find (in regular expression mode):

    (.+)
    

    Replace with:

    "\1"
    

    This adds the quotes:

    "AliceBlue"
    "AntiqueWhite"
    "Aqua"
    "Aquamarine"
    "Azure"
    "Beige"
    "Bisque"
    "Black"
    "BlanchedAlmond"
    
  2. Find (in extended mode):

    \n
    

    Replace with (with a space after the comma, not shown):

    , 
    

    This converts the lines into a comma-separated list:

    "AliceBlue", "AntiqueWhite", "Aqua", "Aquamarine", "Azure", "Beige", "Bisque", "Black", "BlanchedAlmond"
    

  3. Add the var myArray = assignment and braces manually:

    var myArray = ["AliceBlue", "AntiqueWhite", "Aqua", "Aquamarine", "Azure", "Beige", "Bisque", "Black", "BlanchedAlmond"];
    
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If you want to automate this, you can start recording a macro, then perform these steps. – BoltClock Jan 13 '12 at 11:09
That's great Cheers! – Mike Sav Jan 13 '12 at 11:23

A single command can be scripted using a common get -> modify -> replace flow.

If, as in the sample text, the values are each on new lines; simply select the text and use the following command from the N++ PythonScript console:

editor.replaceSel( "var myArray = " + str(editor.getSelText().split('\n')) )

If you find yourself frequently needing such a thing then you can set a shortcut key to it too, and perhaps use:

editor.replaceSel( "var myArray = " + str( filter(None, editor.getSelText().split('\n') ) ) )

instead, which filters out blank lines in the selection.

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  • Place your cursor at the end of the text.
  • Press SHIFT and ->. The cursor will move to the next line.
  • Press CTRL-F and type , in "Replace with:" and press ENTER.

You will need to put a quote at the beginning of your first text and the end of your last.

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