Saturday, November 16, 2019

Re: Trailing ^M on Windows

On Sat, Nov 16, 2019 at 7:06 PM Matteo Landi <matteo@matteolandi.net> wrote:
>
> On 11/16, Tony Mechelynck wrote:
> >On Windows, when you read a file in Vim and every (or almost every)
> >line ends with ^M, it usually means that the last line lacks an
> >end-of-line, which made Vim read the whole file as if it were a Unix
> >file. This is how I would fix such a file:
> >
> > :new ++ff=dos filename.ext
> > :wq
> >
> >(this has the side-effect of opening then closing a new window for
> >that file) — see ":help ++opt".
> >Reading the file with 'fileformat' explicitly set to dos forces both
> >CR+LF or LF alone (or nothing at end of file) to be recognised as
> >ends-of-lines. Writing the file (which still has 'fileformat' set to
> >dos) writes a proper CR+LF Dos/Windows end-of-line at the end of every
> >line including the last one, so the next time you read it it will be
> >recognised as a Windows file and you won't see those pesky ^M (i.e.
> >carriage-return) characters (they are still there but they are part of
> >the normal Dos/Window end-of-line).
> >
> >Or if you want to transmit the file to be read on a Unix system, you
> >can replace :wq by :wq ++ff=unix — in that case all lines will get a
> >proper LF-only Unix end-of-line, which both Vim (on any platform) and
> >any Unix program will be able to recognise properly. In this case the
> >^M characters are not even there so no one will see them.
> >
>
> Thanks Tony for your reply, but I am afraid I did not properly explain
> myself earlier, apologies.
>
> The actual problem I dealing with is trailing ^M when reading from the
> OS clipboard; I started with dumping trailing \r\n data on a file only
> to make it easier for people to reproduce my problem, but ultimately I
> need to figure out how to read from the clipboard without having ^M
> added at the end of each line.
>
> So, going back to my experiments, can anyone suggest why, the following
> strips trailing ^M:
>
> :read! powershell.exe Get-Clipboard
>
> While this one instead, doesn't?
>
> :let @@ = system('powershell.exe Get-Clipboard') | exe 'normal p'
>
> Also, for those who might wonder: reading from the */+ registers
> unfortunately is not an option, as I am trying build a mini-plugin
> around "cb" (https://github.com/iamFIREcracker/cb) which is a script
> that can work via ssh too where you don't have access to the OS
> clipboard; anyway, this is the reason why I am trying to read the
> content of the OS clipboard by using a command, `powershell.exe
> Get-Clipboard`, instead of using the */+ register.
>
> Let me know if this makes things a little more clear.
>
> Thanks.
>
> --
> Matteo Landi
> https://matteolandi.net

My previous answer still applies to this usecase.

As the documentation for :read says, this command accepts a ++opt
modifier, even when used with an !external command.

I expect that

:read ++ff=dos !powershell.exe Get-Clipboard

(with the ++ff= modifier before the exclamation mark) will give you
the result you want, without the ^M characters. Try it, then tell us
if it works.

Best regards,
Tony.

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