This is probably a FAQ. Anyhow, line breaks (better: newlines) can be one of Carriage Return (CR,
, on older Macs), Line Feed (LF,
, on Unices incl. Linux) or CR followed by LF (
, on WinDOS). (Contrary to another answer, this has nothing to do with character encoding.)
Therefore, the most efficient RegExp
literal to match all variants is
/
?
|
/
If you want to match all newlines in a string, use a global match,
/
?
|
/g
respectively. Then proceed with the replace
method as suggested in several other answers. (Probably you do not want to remove the newlines, but replace them with other whitespace, for example the space character, so that words remain intact.)
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