![]() Put them together in one macro and you have a phone-number-standardizing macro. No need to learn real reglular expressions. The ‘aE’ at the end says to replace all and to use regular expressions.) And here’s the trick: You can assemble your find/change commands using PowerFind, then convert them to PowerFind Pro and Paste the result into your macro. (The single plain quotes can be important, although you can sometimes use other quote types. You just need to stack up lists of commands of this form:įind and Replace 'SOMETHING','SOMETHING ELSE','aE' But if you want to do multiple find/replaces in a macro, it’s relatively easy to build. Sometimes you can accomplish this with just a “macroize” command in the find/replace box. ![]() For me at least, almost all of my macros consist of complicated find/replace expressions which I automate. ![]() Douglas Eddy commented that he doesn’t understand macros.ĭon’t entirely give up on NisusWriter macros because the language is hard. #1683: New M3 chips in updated MacBook Pros and iMac, record Apple Q4 profits on lower revenues, no more 27-inch iMacs.#1684: OS bug fix releases, Finder tag poll results, Messages identity verification, blocking spambots, which Apple services do you use?.#1685: Hidden secrets of the Fn key, Emergency SOS via satellite free access extended, RCS support in Messages, Rogue Amoeba icon evolution.#1686: Please support TidBITS, OS security updates, Apple services poll results, biking with an iPhone.#1687: Feature-rich OS updates, recovering from a crashing bug in Contacts, Zoom for Apple TV, how much do you use widgets?.
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