Notepad On Windows 11 Is Finally Getting a Character Count (theverge.com) 47
Microsoft's Notepad app on Windows 11 is getting a character count at the bottom of the window. "When text is selected, the status bar shows the character count for both the selected text and the entire document," explains Microsoft's Windows Insider team in a blog post. "If no text is selected, the character count for the entire document is displayed, ensuring you always have a clear view of your document's length." The Verge reports: This is the latest addition in a line of changes to Notepad this year, with the app recently getting a new autosave option that lets you close it without seeing the pop-up save prompt every time. Microsoft has also added tabs to Notepad, a dark mode, and even a virtual fidget spinner.
Alongside the Notepad changes in this latest Windows 11 test build, the widgets section of the OS is also getting some improvements. You'll soon be able to just show widgets and hide the feed of news and articles that appear inside the widgets screen.
Alongside the Notepad changes in this latest Windows 11 test build, the widgets section of the OS is also getting some improvements. You'll soon be able to just show widgets and hide the feed of news and articles that appear inside the widgets screen.
Can it get working sensibly? (Score:2)
In particular, undo is terrible. The support for multiple text file formats is nice, though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Can it get working sensibly? (Score:2)
Maybe in the preview version. If so I look forward to it going release.
Re:Can it get working sensibly? (Score:5, Informative)
Single Undo is a holdover from Notepad being a simple wrapper over the Win32 text box control. Just like WordPad is a simple wrapper over the Win32 rich edit control, so it gets multiple levels of Undo. Just like MS Paint being a simple wrapper over the functions of GDI.
Re: (Score:2)
characters (Score:2)
How many characters can it handle before it crashes? Can it handle unix style line endings?
Notepad is basically worthless.
Re:characters (Score:4, Informative)
Pretty sure it has handled unix-style line endings since Windows 10. Also supports UTF-8 now.
Re: (Score:3)
Actually it supports UTF-8, UTF-16 LE/BE and possibly UTF-32.
And it's done that since Windows XP - that's how all those notepad jokes worked - they played with how Windows could determine the file format through heuristics.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That's just a simple wrapper around Minesweeper. A fun game where the player has to find the hidden BOM(b).
Re: (Score:3)
How many characters can it handle before it crashes?
It can manipulate multi-megabytes files just fine, and fast too.
Can it handle unix style line endings?
Yes
Notepad is basically worthless.
It used to be, but it has significantly improved in the last few years. It is still a simple text editor, don't expect fancy stuff like syntax highlighting, but you can edit text with it now.
Re: (Score:2)
>> but you can edit text with it now
WOW! Finally a Windows text editor I can edit text with! ;-)
Re: (Score:2)
And all this time I've just been using it to strip formatting from copied text
Re: (Score:1)
Notepad is basically worthless.
Yeah, especially when you haven't paid attention in a decade and repeatedly spout woefully outdated and irrelevant assumptions.
Re: (Score:2)
You mean I should have held on after the first couple decades of uselessness? Why would I assume that anything changed in this all but forgotten tool?
Whoop-de-f'ing-woo (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I use Windows 11 notepad all day every day. It is adequate except for the terrible undo behavior, where you type and paste and hit undo and it undoes both typing and pasting. I use it literally for taking notes. I tried OneNote (which we have) but I tried to rename something and it crashed, and I said well maybe next year. I use Word all day too, which is also garbage. I touched some innocuous styling control yesterday and every Office application on the system crashed except IIRC Outlook. None of them lost
Re: (Score:2)
I use notepad all the time, even though I have access to editors with more features. A very simple text editor can be very useful. First, it's going to be much faster than other text editors. It's also not cluttered with sidebars, toolbars, rulers, and other stuff that takes up space on the screen. If you want something small and out-of-the way that you can use to, for example, copy some text that you can't easily copy (text in an image or video, a few values from a table, whatever) then having a small
Re: (Score:3)
Congrats, I on the other hand use important systems with very strict controls on what is installed so the ability for the OS included software to support more functionality is a godsend. We get it, go back to your Chrome and webbrowser experience, installing whatever you want willy-nilly, but some of us actually have important things to do with our computers.
Re: (Score:1)
Replying to you to undo the positive moderation I gave you a earlier because you're a dick.
Re: (Score:2)
Replying to you to undo the positive moderation I gave you a earlier because you're a dick.
Congrats. You've just shown that you moderate based on how you think of a person rather than the message they post. You should not have mod points, ever. Come back and join the adults when you are less of an emotional wreck and can separate the concept of hating a person from point they made.
Re: (Score:2)
But you are a dick. I unmodded you because of what you said.
Microsoft continues to impress (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
I know right! What will they think of next, dark mode?
Forward-thinking game changer (Score:1)
Wow, what a forward-thinking game changing feature: a character count. Be still mah heart!
I'm kidding; no one uses Notepad unless they literally have no other choice.
Anything else is better. Even the online "make-a-greeting-card" sites have better editors than Notepad.
Re: (Score:2)
Which online "make-a-greeting-card" sites are free these days though? :P
Re: (Score:3)
Anything else is better.
Including all the non-existent software? Many computers don't give the users the ability to blindly install shit, and if they did those users should be fired. OS level support for more functionality is objectively a good thing regardless of if it doesn't affect you personally.
Re: (Score:2)
What are you babbling about?
Notepad is shit, you'd be better off with Edlin.
Re: (Score:2)
Notepad is shit, you'd be better off with Edlin.
I can see you've either not used Notepad, or not used Edlin, actually ... probably both.
Re: (Score:2)
I've used them both, and they both suck.
Use Metapad or Notepad++ or any of the other 10,000 text editors out there, but if you want to deliberately subject yourself to Notepad, be my guest.
Re: (Score:2)
will the color be fixed? (Score:2)
As white letters on blue background like in WinNT?
or will the colours be user selectable via config file like in wni3.x and win9x?
Re: (Score:2)
That has always been something you could change, though for a little while that meant a trip to the registry.
They're going to break it, aren't they? (Score:2)
They're going to tie notepad to the store and break it like they broke the calculator, aren't they?
I can just feel it.
Will it be installed with the OS or MS Store? (Score:2)
Will it be installed with the OS?
Maybe it could be be advertising supported.
I suppose they added the character count so it can popup an ad every 250 characters, including backspaces and delete keys.
Or will it move to the Microsoft store where you can get a subscription for $5.99 a year?
When's Clippy coming back? (Score:2)
Now that would be an overall improvement.
The best new feature (Score:2)
Is not losing the dozens of unsaved notepad windows when a Windows Update (or forced reboot) hits
Windows 11 killer app? (Score:2)
Notepad 11 with character count! /. ?
Why is that a news on
What about syntax highlighting? (Score:2)
Does it have it now?
Can they slow down start up while they're at it? (Score:2)
Sublime text (Score:1)
Notepad ++ called... (Score:2)
...well, it's better than a previous year calling, but not by much.
Still, it's nice to see Notepad become a more usable text editor. I do like all the new features they're bringing to it. I especially like that line and character position now work with "word wrap" enabled. We all use ++, but the workaday consumer is getting some real value out of these efforts.
Oh, who am I kidding? The workaday user doesn't type anything into a flat text file; they fire up Word or something. Or use a sticky note (the progra
Crying out loud, can they just acquire Notepad++?? (Score:2)