SJS wrote:
begin  quoting Brad Beyenhof as of Sat, Feb 23, 2008 at 07:07:44AM -0800:
                                               I prefer to do such a
step with "grep ." to return all lines that contain non-whitespace
characters.

Well, . matches spaces and tabs, so to be pedantic, that's not entirely
true. :)

But there's nothing between ^ and $ to catch the . so it works just
fine.  Better would be to use a g/re/d with an re of "^$". . .

I totally followed all of that *until* "g/re/d".  What is that?



--
Ralph

--------------------
If we didn't have ambiguity in the language we would not have good crossword puzzles.
--carl lowenstein

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