O, right!

You just have to use an expression in the subsitute part (using \=), and
nr2char(), char2nr() and submatch(). Whether you use literal characters
or hex escapes (\x, \%x etc.) doesn't matter. But something like this
should work:

:s!\%x00Heading level 1\%x00\+.\{-}\%x00\+\(\d\+\)\%x00\+
\Body text\%x00vel 1\%x00\+\(\_.\)[\x04\x01\x00]\+!
\\="\x00Body text\x00vel 2\x00\x00".nr2char(char2nr(submatch(2))+4).
\"\x00\x00\x19#".submatch(1)."\x1a"

HTH,

Ben.



On 27/05/11 12:02 AM, Dylan Evans wrote:
I don't believe I expressed the problem very well.  My regular expressions works
perfectly except for string 2.  String 2 reads in a single character.  I then 
need
to write out a different character, which is related to string 2 by having a hex
value 4 more than what was read.  For instance, if string two was an "a", (hex
code 61), I would need to print out an "e" (hex code 65), because 61 + 4 = 65.  
I
would like to do this in gvim because I don't have access to a Perl compiler on
the windows machine that will be performing this task.
Thanks again

On Wed, May 25, 2011 at 8:27 PM, Ben Schmidt <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    On 26/05/11 1:34 AM, Floobit wrote:

        I'm trying to modify a series of binary files made with a legacy
        program, and need to change a certain character in my search string to
        the character with hex code +4.  For context, here is my sed regex:

        :s!^@Heading level 1^@\+.\{-}^@\+\(\d\+\)^@\+Body text^@vel 1^@\+\(\_.
        \{1}\)[^D^A^@]\+!^@Body text^@vel 2^@^@\2^@^@^Y#\1^Z

        with HEX(^@) =00, etc.  String 2 is only 1 character long, but is
        occasionally rendered as a carriage return, thus the need for the \_.
        \{1} pattern.  Instead of writing the exact character of string 2, I
        need to write the character +4 to its hex code.  For instance, if
        HEX(string2)=97, I would need to print ASCII(9b).


    To match it, either put it in directly (type Ctrl-V then Ctrl-D to get
    ^D, for example) or match with \%x outside a collection ( :help /\%x )
    or just \x inside a collection ( :help /\] ).

    To include it in the substitution, either put it in directly (except
    there are a few oddities, e.g. with \n or ^J representing null--:help
    sub-replace-special) or use an expression (:help sub-replace-expression)
    which can use nr2char() (:help nr2char()) or \x in a string (:help
    expr-string).

    Here's one option, avoiding using control characters, which means it's
    robust in something like .vimrc as encoding changes won't come into
    play, it turns out something like this:

    :s!\%x00Heading level 1\%x00\+.\{-}\%x00\+\(\d\+\)\%x00\+
    \Body text\%x00vel 1\%x00\+\(\_. \)[\x04\x01\x00]\+!
    \\="\x00Body text\x00vel 2\x00\x00".submatch(2).
    \"\x00\x00\x19#".submatch(1)."\x1a"

    (The backslashes at the beginnings of lines are just for line
    continuation if including in a .vimrc or script; omit them if you're
    joining the lines together, e.g. on the commandline.)

    I have no idea why you would use \{1}, so I omitted it, too. I may have
    made a bunch more booboos if I didn't understand the original regex
    (e.g. because sed has differences to Vim, which I know it does, but am
    not sure on any specifics).

    There are many, many other possible ways of achieving the same, too, so
    the above is just one opinion....

    Ben.





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