
Given the clear limitations of Windows’ default text editor (Notepad), many users working with text files (both ANSI and OEM) such as programmers, may find TextPad to be the simple yet comprehensive utility they need. This TXT editor comes with all the features present in Notepad and then more – file comparison, keystroke macros, a tabbed interface for simultaneous files, and configurable syntax highlighting, among others.
Designed following the Windows user interface guidelines, Windows users will find its overall design suspiciously familiar. Its tabbed interface will let you open and work simultaneously with as many text files as you need and even open each file twice if required, a feature that also comes very handy when comparing files. In terms of editing, it comes with all the usual suspects – search, replace, cut, paste, do, redo, etc. – and with features that Notepad can only dream of.
Together with the file comparison feature, its spelling checker (with support for 10 languages) and the option to create and execute macros are probably the program’s main assets. Macros are a really useful tool to perform bulk corrections or modifications in long and complex files, such as code files. They are very easy to create and you can save up to 16 of them easily for future use.
Not so impressive and yet quite useful features that you can also find in TextPad are, for instance, its unlimited undo/redo capability, the possibility to sort lines, to start off exactly where you left it, add bookmarks to specific lines, or a built-in file manager for quick copying, deleting, and renaming of files, among other interesting functions.
TextPad is probably one of the most comprehensive text-only editors. It is not free, and its price tag is not precisely low, but its many features (with useful hints to programmers) may well be worth the cost for some companies, offering licenses for up to 500 users.
v8.1.2 [Nov 17, 2016]
Double and triple click using MS conventions should not have been actioned until button up.
Under MS mouse conventions, triple click now only selects the current paragraph in word wrap mode, otherwise the current display line is selected.
Default DOS encoding didn't work in v8 for quick opened, double clicked or dropped files.
If the default codepage for a document class was UTF-8, but a member file did not contain UTF-8 characters, non-ASCII characters were replaced with "?" when it was opened.
Fixed crash when opening syntax highlighted files where the final character is a digit.