RegEx validation inTextEdit control of DevExpress - devexpress-wpf

I need to restrict user input in a text edit control to 1-99. After reading this ticket https://www.devexpress.com/Support/Center/Question/Details/Q458791, used a RegEx mask to achieve it.
<dxe:TextEdit Grid.Column="2" Text="{Binding FontSize , UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged, Mode=TwoWay}" Grid.Row="1" VerticalAlignment="Center" MaskType="RegEx" MaskUseAsDisplayFormat="True" Mask="^[1-9]\d?$" EditValueChanged="TextEdit_EditValueChanged"/>
Now its showing the mask string as well in the input area (^[1-9]\d?$). Tried with different reg ex combinations. Please help.

^ and $ usually marks the beginning and the end of a string in a regex filtered mask. In these text editors, the input is always counted as a string. You don't need to do this by yourself.
If you would search in a text for a specific combination, you will need to use ^ and $.

Related

VSCode Wrap HTML attributes each on their own line

I'm looking for a setting or extension in VSCode that provides the following functionality:
Format on save
wrap html attributes on their own line, even if there is only one attribute
put closing symbol of opening tag on new line, aligned with tag
alphabetically order attributes
do not align attributes according to the position of the first attribute, simple use one level of indentation
Example 1:
<span my-attr="value">Hello, world!</span>
becomes
<span
my-attr="value"
>
Hello, world!
</span>
Example 2:
<x-status-indicator wire:click="pushMe" class="block" :status="$status"
:description="$description" />
then becomes
<x-status-indicator
:description="$description"
:status="$status"
class="block"
wire:click="pushMe"
/>
So far there have been many posts about formatting, but I could not find a single post or extension that satisfies these requirements. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, thank you! :)

Change text in textbox based on value

Is there a way to change the text in a dashboard based on a value?
At its most basic, I want to be able to plug in the word 'increased' or 'decreased' based on a change from year to year for a report.
If you mean the free-floating Text object from the same menu as vertical / horizonal containers, Blanks, etc. then you can only use parameters and a few "special" values like Workbook Name.
However, you can use a worksheet as a textbox instead. Just make sure you clear the default formatting (borders, etc.) and put your calculated field that resolves into "increased" / "decreased" on the Text mark. In the same way you can add up or down arrows using CHR() function and set custom colours (by creating two calculated fields that resolve into "increased" and "" and "decreased" and "")

How to hide character range with CodeMirror?

I'm not sure what I'm asking for is possible, but here we go:
I'm trying to create an editor that allows JS style interpolation in text. The fields syntax-wise should be exactly what goes into an expression like this:
`Hello ${name} how are you doing on this ${weather} day?`
But without the ticks, so this is what the user should see:
Hello ${name} how are you doing on this ${weather} day?
My first thought was to simply hide the first and last character in the editor and keep syntax highlighting, tokenizing, everything the same, and I'm good to go. Is this possible to do with CodeMirror?

Visual Studio Code and Prettier html formatting on separate lines

I'm using VS Code, and Prettier and cannot get it to format the way I want it to be upon saving.
If I have a line like
<input type="checkbox" /> Label<br />
upon format/save, it becomes
<input type="checkbox" />
Label
<br />
I don't want to turn off Format on Save since I want to be able to Format Document from time-to-time. Is there a setting to get the line breaks how I want them? I'd prefer it only wrap on line length and other wanted places (e.g. select and option tags on different lines)
Note: this is just a simplified example. There are many other cases where it's putting every tag on a separate line when I'd like them to stay on one.
You need to update your .prettierrc file in your root to have
"printWidth": 1000
or whatever print width you are looking to have and it should fix this. Also check out the Prettier docs at https://prettier.io/docs/en/configuration.html to see other items you can configure.

How to do search and replace involving fields in Microsoft Word?

I have a Word document with fields of the reference variety, which occur in the form "[field].[field]"--in other words, there's a period between the two fields. I want to globally replace this with a space.
Word offers the ^d special character to search for fields, but for some reason the query "^d.^d" does not find anything. However, ".^d" does. Now comes the problem, however--what do I specify as the replacement text in order to retain the field code? If using regular expressions, I could use a "Find What Expression" such as \1, but with regexp ("wild card") mode the ^d is not permitted.
I guess I could write a macro...
I would like to add to Bibadia's solution.
An example of an index entry field; we want to change a name we misspelled.
Make sure hidden formatting is displayed (toggle with SHIFT+CTRL+F8).
Make sure wildcards option is not selected. To search for fields, use the opening and closing field braces code (optionally use ^w for spaces, as Bibadia suggested):^19 XE "Deo, John" ^21
Replace won't recognize field braces character, but will allow to insert the clipboard's content. ;). To do that, insert in text the correct entry. CTRL+F9 to insert field and type:XE "Doe, John"
Select the field above and copy
Use ^c in the replace box
Hit Replace All
Ta-da!
It's usually better to go the macro route when finding fields because, as you say, the find algorithm that Word uses doesn't work the way you might hope with fields.
But if you know exactly what the fields contain, you can specify a search pattern that will probably work (however not in wildcard mode).
For example, if you want to look for figure number field pairs such as
{ STYLEREF 1 \s }.{ SEQ Figure \* ARABIC \s 1 }
(which would typically be the same set of fields everywhere in the document)
If you only really need to look for the following:
{ STYLEREF 1 \s }.<any field>
you could ensure that field codes are displayed and search for
^d STYLEREF 1 \s ^21.^d
or
^19 STYLEREF 1 \s ^21.^19
If you need to be more precise, you can spell out the second field as well.
"^d" only works for finding the field beginning, not the field end.
It's a shame that ^w wants to find at least 1 whitespace character because otherwise it would be more robust to look for
^19^wSTYLEREF^w1^w\s^w^21.^19
Perhaps someone else knows how to work around that without using wildcards?
Torzaburo,
I suggest that you do this using a macro. You can start by recording the macro, and later refining your processing steps within the macro.
First turn on the hidden characters by navigating to Home > Paragraph > toggle the show/hide Paragraph symbol. Also, select all and toggle the field codes on (right-click and select "Toggle Field Codes".
Open a new blank Word doc in addition to the one you have open. You will use this later. Start the macro recording and find the field using the "^d" (field code) as you said.
When the field is found, copy only the field text within the brackets, and not the full field reference. While the macro is still recording, ALT + TAB to the new blank document and paste the field code in as plain text.
At this point, do the necessary find & replace processing to the field codes. Highlight the processed field codes, copy, ALT + TAB back to the original document, and paste back between the { } brackets.
Stop the macro recording. Add any further custom processing to the macro VBA.
Select-All and re-toggle the field codes. Update the field codes.
You don't need a macro. Just toggle all field codes on by using Alt+F9. Then do a find and replace for what you want to change. Once the replacement is complete, use Alt+F9 again to toggle the field codes back off.
Disclaimer: I didn't originate this solution, but it's clean and elegant and I thought it should be included here:
(Adapted from Search & Replace Field Codes in Word):
Create or find a single instance of the field you want to convert text to
Toggle Field Codes visible (AltF9)
Copy the code for the field you want to use to the Clipboard (highlight and CtrlC)
Open the Replace dialog box (CtrlH), insert the text you want to replace in the Find What box and then enter ^c in the Replace With box.
This will replace your text with the contents of the Clipboard, turning it into the field code you copied in step 3. It also copies formatting information (font, color, etc.), to control how the field will appear when hidden. (Caveat: I've tested this with Word 2003 under Windows 7 only.)
Coming in late on this, probably way too late for Beth (sorry Beth). And this may not be quite what Beth was looking for. But for anyone interested ...
It sounds like Beth may have created captions throughout the document using INSERT CAPTION (hence the presence of field codes). This means these captions will have been (automatically) created in CAPTION style.
To globally replace the separator "." with " " (space) in such captions, take two steps:
[1] Go to REFERENCES | INSERT CAPTION, then click on NUMBERING and replace the SEPARATOR "." with "EM-DASH". This will replace all separators in captions for the selected label in the CAPTION Window. If you have other labels in use in the document (e.g. FIGURE), select the other labels one by one and repeat this process.
[2] Do a find/replace searching for special character "em-dash" (^+) in style CAPTION, replacing with " ". Click REPLACE ALL.
Voila!
NOTE: This presumes that em-dash does not appear in the caption text anywhere. If it does, then you'll need to do a pre- and post- "fiddle" to ensure these em-dashes are not touched by the global replace above.
The "pre-fiddle" is to do a global find/replace across captions, replacing the em-dash ("^+") with some other string (e.g. "EM-DASH") that doesn't ever occur in any caption's text. Then you do the separator change as described above. Finally, the "post-fiddle" is to restore the em-dashes that were in the captions, by doing a global replace of the string "EM-DASH" with the actual em-dash character "^+".