

In addition, you can personalize the style for each supported language, selecting the color, typeface, font size and style for the key words. Its features include syntax for different programming languages, which you can completely personalize. In addition to working with plain text, it can be used as a source code editor by programmers, and it's compatible with more than 50 languages. And if you need a more capable text-editing tool than the built-in Windows Notepad, we definitely recommend Notepad2.Notepad++ is an excellent plain text editor with all of the features you miss from your traditional Notepad. But if you use Notepad for lots of things, you'll probably like Notepad2's many improvements.


If all you use Notepad for is grocery lists and passwords, you probably don't need Notepad2 the Microsoft tool is enough. The Settings menu has more than 20 entries ranging from Transparency to Esc Key Function. Notepad2's has 17 entries, including Default Font, Show Whitespace, Long Line Markers, Highlight Current Line, and Selection Margin. Notepad's View menu has one entry, Status bar. That's pretty clever, but if it's not enough, click Customize Schemes for more control and options, including the ability to import and export configuration files. We could also check boxes to set a scheme as default and autoselect schemes by filename extension. The Select Scheme tool's default setting is Default Text, but the list includes Web Source Code, XML, JavaScript, VBScript, C and C++, SQL, Perl, Pascal, Batch, and Diff files, among many others. Notepad2's toolbar offered not only basic controls like Open, Browse, and Save but also useful text tools such as Word Wrap and Zoom In and Out.īetter still are the two built-in Scheme tools, Select Scheme and Customize Schemes. The document opened inside Notepad2 and worked like any text file. We opened a new text document from Explorer. Notepad2's installer asked us if we wanted to replace Notepad as the default text editor in Windows, though it says you can uninstall Notepad2 from the Control Panel to restore Notepad as the default text editor. We tried it in 64-bit Windows Home Premium SP1. It's available in separate downloads for 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows. Notepad2 offers many more features than Notepad and can replace it as the default text file tool in Windows.

But writers, programmers, and others who use text files a lot know that Notepad has its limitations. Notepad2's developer, Flo's Freeware, notes that there's nothing wrong with Notepad, the default text editor in Windows: it's lightweight, fast, and fully integrated with the operating system.
