With notepad2 in vista




















Followers 0. Recommended Posts. Posted August 25, The problem is with takeown or icacls. The notepad. Testing requires burning a DVD and reinstalling. Any ideas? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options Posted August 25, edited.

EDIT: sorry, i see your talkinkg about vista, so this method doesnt work. Edited August 25, by zeko. Glad you got it sorted, thats what we are all here for hopefully John L. Galt Posted August 26, Posted August 26, edited. Aug 13, Fix clang-tidy error. Sep 11, Code refactoring.

Apr 5, Add project wiki as a git submodule. Oct 12, Fix some Cppcheck warnings. May 16, Update readme. Jan 9, Update wiki and release note template. Apr 15, Feb 14, Rename master to main. Sep 24, Scintilla 5. Dec 7, View code. Notepad2 and metapath Notepad2-zufuliu is a modified version fork of Notepad2-mod. Binaries Latest development builds artifacts in Release configuration for each compiler and platform are available on GitHub Actions and AppVeyor.

Even modern web browsers are terribly slow with large plain text files even on ultra-fast machines , so large files are better be split into smaller parts, even more if editing with an agile Notepad-like editor is desired.

The large file warning message dialog provides an option not to be displayed any more. Or you could adjust the size limit for when the warning is triggered: add the value FileLoadWarningMB to the [Settings2] section of the Notepad2 ini-file, and assign it the size in megabytes. Notepad2 needs to keep the whole file in memory to be able to perform syntax highlighting , and also requires additional memory to store undo history, perform encoding conversion on saving, etc.

That's why editing very big files can lead to memory exhaustion, and possible loss of data. If the Notepad2 zip file is downloaded with Internet Explorer, the file is labeled to be insecure, as it origins from the web. Some unzip tools may also add this label for extracted files, and this may cause a security warning when running Notepad2. To remove this warning message, right-click the Notepad2. Confirm this action with the OK button. If no existing ini-file is found, Notepad2 will not create one, unless the settings are saved manually F7.

Also see the topic Why are my program settings not saved at all? If there's no ini-file Notepad2 can use, some functionality, such as saving a sticky window position, remembering recent files and search strings, saving settings on exit, or running Notepad2 in reuse window and single file instance modes, are not available, and therefore the appropriate menu items will be disabled.

Note that the functionality mentioned above is also disabled when running Notepad2. As of version 3. If no existing ini-file is found, you need to manually save the settings F7 the first time. From now, the program settings are saved to the newly created ini-file. Furthermore, Notepad2 requires write access to the ini-file to be able to save the program settings.

If settings are saved manually F7 , a warning message appears if the ini-file is write-protected. However, on exit, no warning is issued, as setting the read-only flag of the ini-file can be used to freeze the settings. You need to move the Notepad2. If you are reusing your ini-file from previous versions, it is still encoded in your local system encoding. This causes some settings to be saved improperly recent files with Unicode names, Unicode search strings, Unicode font names.

You could also reuse your ini-file with the earlier non-Unicode encoding, this would save a few KB of disk space. But in this case, you won't be able to save Unicode data items mentioned above. Notepad2 first tries to find the ini-file with the same name as the executable file, and then the file Notepad2. By default, if no existing configuration file is found with the above rules, the ini-file location is set to the Notepad2 program directory, and the the name of the executable file is used.

However, the ini-file will only be created if the settings are saved manually F7. If a relative file name is specified on the command line as an alternative location of the ini-file, the same rules apply use something like Notepad2. To let each user on your system have his own Notepad2 configuration, create one central Notepad2.

Now insert something like the following configuration section into the central ini-file:. This will create a separate file named Notepad2-userxy. To have the ini-file stored in the user profile instead of the Windows directory, use something like this:. If a relative pathname is specified, it is again searched with the rules outlined in the previous question.

Note that when settings are being imported, missing sections of the ini-file will be skipped and won't restore the default settings, so it's possible to import ini-files containing just selected scheme settings. To block the "Don't display this message again" option for an individual notification, set the value of the corresponding ini-option to 2.

You may have noticed that the Notepad2 ini-file has a configuration section named [Settings2]. This section offers some advanced Notepad2 program settings, and can only be edited manually. Most changes only take effect upon restarting Notepad2. The expense of collecting, testing, packaging and hosting translated versions of Notepad2 was more than I felt happy with for my hobby project.

Switching to a simple list of links was not much better: the many links to file sharing hosts appeared somewhat dubious, and they still had to be updated with each new release of the translated files. Often I received e-mails with reported linguistic mistakes not being fixed by the authors, or several people competing for a translation to the same language. That's why, for the time being, I have decided not to take care of translated versions of Notepad2, any longer.

I may change my mind once I have more free time for my hobby project, or there may be someone else interested in operating a Notepad2 International website. The answer to all the above question is: Yes! Notepad2 may be used freely for private, educational and commercial purpose. You are also allowed to modify or translate Notepad2 and redistribute your altered version, as long as the conditions outlined in the included License.

I don't recommend bundling Notepad2 with other applications, as some users may prefer another text editor, and by providing a link to the Notepad2 website, you make sure people are always using the most recent version. Will it run faster?

Theoretically, yes. Usually, bit machine code is processed natively by the CPU on bit Windows, but there's still the slight overhead of the WOW64 emulator. This difference probably doesn't matter at all in daily use. Will it open larger files? No, the underlying Scintilla source code editing component internally works with bit integers, so there's the same size limits for the bit and the bit builds. Better system integration! There's sophisticated rules how access to system files is redirected for WOW64 applications, so there may be a few special cases where knowledge of these rules is required to be able to edit system files using the bit version of Notepad2 on a bit machine.

So why not temporarily disabling the WOW64 File System Redirector and make the bit version of Notepad2 feel at home on bit systems?



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