Convert between Unix and Windows text files

Overview

The format of Windows and Unix text files differs slightly. In Windows, lines end with both the line feed and carriage return ASCII characters, but Unix uses only a line feed. As a consequence, some Windows applications will not show the line breaks in Unix-format files. Likewise, Unix programs may display the carriage returns in Windows text files with Ctrl-m ( ^M ) characters at the end of each line.

There are many ways to solve this problem. This document provides instructions for using FTP, screen capture, unix2dos and dos2unix, tr , awk, Perl, and vi to do the conversion. To use these utilities, the files you are converting must be on a Unix computer.

Note: In the instructions below, replace unixfile.txt with the name of your Unix file, and replace winfile.txt with the Windows filename.

FTP

When using an FTP program to move a text file between Unix and Windows, be sure the file is transferred in ASCII format, so the document is transformed into a text format appropriate for the host. Some FTP programs, especially graphical applications, do this automatically. If you are using command line FTP, before you begin the transfer, enter:

ascii

Note: For file transfers to and from UITS systems at Indiana University, you must use an SFTP client

tr

You can use tr to remove all carriage returns and Ctrl-z ( ^Z ) characters from a Windows file:

tr -d '\ 15 \ 32 ' < winfile.txt > unixfile.txt

However, you cannot use tr to convert a document from Unix format to Windows.

awk

To use awk to convert a Windows file to Unix, enter:

awk '{ sub("\r$", ""); print }' winfile.txt > unixfile.txt

To convert a Unix file to Windows, enter:

awk 'sub("$", "\r")' unixfile.txt > winfile.txt

Older versions of awk do not include the sub function. In such cases, use the same command, but replace awk with gawk or nawk .

Perl

To convert a Windows text file to a Unix text file using Perl, enter:

perl -p -e 's/\r$//' < winfile.txt > unixfile.txt

To convert from a Unix text file to a Windows text file, enter:

perl -p -e 's/

/\r

/' < unixfile.txt > winfile.txt

You must use single quotation marks in either command line. This prevents your shell from trying to evaluate anything inside.

vi

In vi, you can remove carriage return ( ^M ) characters with the following command:

:1,$s/^M//g

To input the ^M character, press Ctrl-v , and then press Enter or return .