Hello all,
This is a bit of an uncommon question I suppose, but I'm wondering if there's any special character or a combination of characters which could be used to fake a line break in the C2 textfiles, instead of, you know, simply pressing "Enter".
It's not really hugely important, I was just thinking of compacting some of the often used large textfiles by combining multiple settings on single lines. The game of course expects line breaks, and if you just go on and combine multiple settings on a single line anyway, the game will crash (surprise!).
Cheers. :)
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Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
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Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
Alt-0160 maybe? It's the Alt code for a space.
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Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
Alt-0160 maybe? It's the Alt code for a space.
Heh that was the first thing I tried as well, doesn't work though.
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Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
Damn :(Alt-0160 maybe? It's the Alt code for a space.
Heh that was the first thing I tried as well, doesn't work though.
Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
Internet tells us this:
Notepad has lots of limitations as an editor, and this is one of them. You can't do it. You need an editor that supports regular expressions. You want to replace the comma with a \r\n (carriage return,linefeed) (Unless you install Linux, then you only want the \n).
Use a different editor. If you have Word, that will work. Notepad++ is another alternative, and it's free.
Notepad has lots of limitations as an editor, and this is one of them. You can't do it. You need an editor that supports regular expressions. You want to replace the comma with a \r\n (carriage return,linefeed) (Unless you install Linux, then you only want the \n).
Use a different editor. If you have Word, that will work. Notepad++ is another alternative, and it's free.
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Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
Using Notepad++, I can view the special characters Notepad doesn't show, such as the character at the end of each line. I can copy these characters to clipboard and paste where I want them, but for now, Notepad++ still creates a new line after those characters, so I can't insert any text to the right side of them, on the same line.
I think what I'm after is sort of a 'special' editing mode in Notepad++, which would let me insert text after a character when editing the textfile, but which would translate into an actual line break in the saved textfile. For example:
A line like this when editing in Notepad++...
A B C D
... would save as this:
A
B
C
D
Or something similar to that effect. :)
The hunt continues...
I think what I'm after is sort of a 'special' editing mode in Notepad++, which would let me insert text after a character when editing the textfile, but which would translate into an actual line break in the saved textfile. For example:
A line like this when editing in Notepad++...
A B C D
... would save as this:
A
B
C
D
Or something similar to that effect. :)
The hunt continues...
Can you 'fake' a line break in the textfiles?
What info I can get from what that guy on the internet said is that you replace the comma to be /r/n (I've never used Notepad++, so I have no idea what this means) and then use the comma to create the "hard enters".\
So it would be like:
A , B , C , D
And then , would stand for /r/n
But like I said, I have no idea how it works :P
EDIT, some more internet infos:
You can search and replace by CR in Notepad (works for CSV purposes) by:
- Firing up Excel, and typing Alt-Enter in a cell to enter a CR
- Saving this file as CSV
- Opening this CSV in Notepad - the CR will be shown as a blank square
- Copy this square and paste it into Replace
- When replace is done, CR will be there, and can be interpreted (though not with Notepad - but Wordpad will do it, so will Excel...)
EDIT, and another person said this:
Notepad++ insert carriage return
In notepad++ you can easily find a carriage return by copying a section of text with a carriage return in it and doing ctrl+f or ctrl+h to replace, but you cannot copy that block and paste into the replace box. I found the answer for this here: http://bytes.com/topic/net/answers/7676 ... -character
In the replace area, type
\1\r\n\2 -- \1 is the first group, \r\n is a carriage return and a new
line, \2 is the second group.
So it would be like:
A , B , C , D
And then , would stand for /r/n
But like I said, I have no idea how it works :P
EDIT, some more internet infos:
You can search and replace by CR in Notepad (works for CSV purposes) by:
- Firing up Excel, and typing Alt-Enter in a cell to enter a CR
- Saving this file as CSV
- Opening this CSV in Notepad - the CR will be shown as a blank square
- Copy this square and paste it into Replace
- When replace is done, CR will be there, and can be interpreted (though not with Notepad - but Wordpad will do it, so will Excel...)
EDIT, and another person said this:
Notepad++ insert carriage return
In notepad++ you can easily find a carriage return by copying a section of text with a carriage return in it and doing ctrl+f or ctrl+h to replace, but you cannot copy that block and paste into the replace box. I found the answer for this here: http://bytes.com/topic/net/answers/7676 ... -character
In the replace area, type
\1\r\n\2 -- \1 is the first group, \r\n is a carriage return and a new
line, \2 is the second group.
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