Yep :]
Though you’re not doing anything with the text inside the tags, so it’s
redundant to capture it (with the brackets):
.*?
> On 2018-01-31, at 09:12, Jaime Guitart Vilches
> wrote:
>
> What I really would like to do is to erase anything between those tags
> (including the tags themsel
On 1/30/18 at 3:12 PM, jaime.guit...@gmail.com (Jaime Guitart
Vilches) wrote:
What I really would like to do is to erase anything between
those tags (including the tags themselves), so I understand I
would have to use this:
Find: (.*?)
Replace: [and here leave blank]
That should do the jo
Well this may be very helpful, thank you very much.
What I really would like to do is to erase anything between those tags
(including the tags themselves), so I understand I would have to use this:
Find: (.*?)
Replace: [and here leave blank]
I am very thankful, if this works you've just saved m
I would add to look at the "Grep Reference" in BBEdit Help for documentation of
the syntax. Grep is like wildcards on steroids.
[fletcher]
> On Jan 30, 2018, at 6:31 AM, Kerri Hicks wrote:
>
> Well, it depends on what you want to do to those elements. But here's an
> example (and note the "
Well, it depends on what you want to do to those elements. But here's
an example (and note the "grep" box is checked at the bottom). This will
take the string
this is what the number 5 looks like
and will return
this is what the number looks like
Does that help at all? More info abo
Hello
I'm new to this and I hope I can get some help with what I expect/hope to
be a basic lack of knowledge on my side...
I'm editing a large database and I need to replace a series of strings that
are clearly delimited with tags .
I'm wondering if there's a wildcard character I can use to s