If you want to replace every paragraph mark with a space, you can search for “$”, which is any paragraph mark, and replace it with " " (leaving out the quotation marks, and enabling regular expressions). → I am not sure why the brackets are needed to make the search-replace work properly with the space character here, where in the following cases just a normal space will work: Here, ^ means start of new line, and is a single space character contained between two square brackets. In LibreOffice, I found I can do the same by saying replace “^” with nothing (leaving out the quotation marks, and enabling regular expressions). Im MS Word, this would be: replace "^p " with “^p” (leaving out the quotation marks). ![]() ![]() I had a similar problem: How can I replace “a paragraph mark followed by a space” with “just a paragraph mark”?
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