On Oct 19, 11:07am, Lucas Vogel wrote: > Does anyone know of a utility that will go through files and replace the > CR/LF characters with the unix variant(isn't it just LF?)? The program appended below does what you want on an entire directory hierarchy. I wrote it back in the days when I frequently needed to handle Mac text files. It'll work on those files too. It even creates timestamped backup files. For those of you who're wondering why I wrote: s/\015\012?/\012/g; instead of the (nicer looking): s/\r\n?/\n/g; It's because the former is more portable. The meaning of \r and \n changes depending upon the platform. --- fix-newlines --- #!/usr/bin/perl -w use File::Find; use FileHandle; use English; my ($root) = @ARGV; if (!defined($root)) { die "Usage: $0 root\n"; } @ARGV = (); find( sub { if (-f && -T) { push @ARGV, $File::Find::name; } }, $root ); $INPLACE_EDIT = '.bak-' . time(); while (<>) { s/\015\012?/\012/g; print; } --- end fix-newlines ---