Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas wrote:
Hi :-),
A small answer to myself that can be useful is someone find this thread:
I have seen some post on Internet about CR and LF issues on Pharo
Smalltalk, like this:
[1]
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11739548/how-to-correctly-decode-text-files-from-filesystemreadstream-in-pharo-1-4
[2]
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1598054/smalltalk-newline-character
A detailed search on the web take me to this:
http://magaloma.seasidehosting.st/Collections-Strings
Here I searched for "replace" and found the proper method:
"""
withInternetLineEndings
change line endings from CR's to CRLF's. This is probably in
prepration for sending a string over the Internet
"""
So taking my string and sending:
myString contents withInternetLineEndings
did the trick.
I hope it will be helpful for future newbies.
Cheers,
Offray
On 09/22/2014 01:38 PM, Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas wrote:
Hi all! :-)
Today is a good day because Pharo is helping me a lot in getting things
done (like in the Black Eyed Peas song, but nerdy style). Here you can
see a screenshot of the exportation of the outliner project I have been
working on (still in alpha):
http://www.enlightenment.org/ss/e-54206a705cafd9.68856727.jpg
Down is the Pharo outliner, upper left the markdown exportation and
upper right the pdf exportation. As you can see, I have small glitches
that need to be solved, mainly the fact that new lines are represented
in Pharo by default with CR instead of LR, which doesn't like so much to
the Pandoc[1][2] exporter. So, there is any way to change this behaviour
to make LF the default character? This has some implications when you're
writing code inside System Browsers or Playgrounds instead of my
particular app? If yes, there is any way to replace each CR for LF in a
text object, inside Pharo?
[1] http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/
[2]
http://programminghistorian.org/lessons/sustainable-authorship-in-plain-text-using-pandoc-and-markdown
Thanks a lot,
Offray
Thanks for the update. I'm not entirely new anymore, but there are
always new corners to learn.
cheers -ben