Do you know what encoding these files are using? There are tools to convert from one encoding to another.

If you really need to filter unprintable characters, line by line, then

$\ = "\n"; while (<>) { s/[^[:print:]]//g; print; }
does this, but also converts to unix line endings...

tr/// will be faster, however. Characters \177-\377 aren't ASCII printable, you may want to filter those, too. There's no need to chomp line ends, only to add them back later.

while (<WORK>) { tr/\000-\011\013\014\016-\037\177-\377//d; print $file $_; }

Even better is to specify the good characters, remove anything other. Consider using fixed-length input (avoid arbitrary big line buffers). Finally, you probably want raw binmode to avoid problems with ^Z and so on. See open.

use open IO => ':bytes'; $/ = \4096; ... while (<WORK>) { tr/\012\015\040-\176//cd; print $file $_; }


In reply to Re: Removing non-printing (hex codes) from text files by oiskuu
in thread Removing non-printing (hex codes) from text files by moesplace

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