>On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 06:28:07PM -0800, Mark wrote:
>> I'm not a search expert and I would be grateful for any help this list
>> can offer.
>> 
>> I have a website that is infected with malware that was injected into
>> javascript files. I'm trying to use BBedit to find and remove the
>> offending code. The code contains some hexadecimal characters which
>> can be found by searching a single page, but cannot be found doing a
>> multi-file search. The multi-file search seems to bog down when the
>> first hexadecimal character is fully used in the search. The offending
>> code is 2204 characters on  one line, but for I think only the first
>> few characters are needed to help me:
>> Offending code: var _0x4470=["\x39\x3D\x31\x2E\x64\x28\x27
>> Search that finds all instances: var _0x4470=["\x3
>> Search that finds no instances: var _0x4470=["\x39

On 1/10/12 6:50 PM, "Ronald J Kimball" <[email protected]> wrote:

>In the same way that the \x39 in the JavaScript is a representation of the
>character 9, the \x39 in the search pattern matches the character 9.  To
>match the literal sequence \x39, you need to escape the backslash in the
>search: var _0x4470=["\\x39
>
>Ronald

Ronald,

Thank you. That was the solution.

Mark



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