Two people have offered similar solutions; thanks Keith McKenna and Alan B.
The backslash was left out of my email although I had typed it in; so "p" or "n" did not work for me, just to clarify. Solution: What did work was searching on ^$ and just the $. What is interesting is that if I use ^$ it finds paragraph returns between lines (no typing on the line) but not at the end of the line. If I use just the $ it finds all paragraph returns, end of line of type and blank lines. Thanks so much and also that this solution is buried in the help. Elena --- ************************************* http://pedalmegone.wordpress.com ************************************* On 2015-01-02 21:01, Alan B wrote: > On Fri, Jan 2, 2015 at 2:01 PM, xena_r <xen...@skyviewmail.com> wrote: > >> I'm tryng to replace carriage returns in a list of email addresses in > > Hi Elena - > > Serendipitous timing. I just had the same problem about two nights ago and > did the same things you tried. Keith almost has the solution that worked > for me. > > In find enter only $ > In replace enter what you want to replace them with. > > The answer actually is in the online help in the area about using regular > expressions. It wasn't until reading through the third or fourth time very > very slowly and deliberately that I actually caught the instruction for > using the $. > > Hope this works for you too.