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    Replace Notepad on Windows 11

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    • PeterJonesP
      PeterJones @mmjoshi
      last edited by

      @mmjoshi

      From what my research has shown (which is all I can do, since my PCs haven’t started telling me to install the new versin yet), Windows 11 has tweaked the way that file associations work again, making it less convenient to do things the “old” way that’s compatible with historical Windows versions.

      In the “old” way, instead of manually overriding every extension separately to associate it with Notepad++, you could just edit the txtfile entry in regedit to make it point to Notepad++ instead of notepad.exe: I never had a reason to use that hack (and that’s what it was; the “debug” option that it makes use of was never intended for “notepad.exe replacement”) that’s been around for years.

      Like @Neil-Schipper , I haven’t bothered associating most file types with Notepad++, but for a very different reason: . My reason is that Notepad++ often installs an option for all files that says “Open with Notepad++” in the main right-click menu, or in Windows 10 and earlier, I know how to create one if a particular Windows machine doesn’t get that right-click verb. My research has shown that Windows 11 tries to hide such verbs, but you can google for workarounds to show alternate verbs.

      @Neil-Schipper said,

      I love having boring old feature-poor super-reliable Notepad.exe as the default for most/many file types.
      Np++ (perhaps due to my reckless use of it) can get into a wonky state.

      I actually highly disagree with those reasons. First, because I only want MS Notepad to appear when I intentionally invoke it (and usually only for when I’m editing the config files of Notepad++, or want a temporary “visible clipboard” to hold the results of my Notepad++-config-file-diff when I’m upgrading from one Notepad++ to a newer one, and I have to close all instances of Notepad++, but still want my list of changes easily available. Second, because I have never seen Notepad++ get into a wonky state, except when I am experimenting with something I know is dangerous (usually involving my “Perl Script” module which externally manipulates Notepad++) or when I am intentionally corrupting a portable copy to try to replicate a problem that someone has asked about in the Forum.

      mmjoshiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • mmjoshiM
        mmjoshi @Neil Schipper
        last edited by

        @Neil-Schipper That’s a new way of looking at my workflow. Thanks. Would try this out. A great advantage here is I do not have to tinker with registry settings every time I do a clean install of Windows, which in my case happens to be a lot of times!

        I use the portable version of almost all the programs, Notepad++ included. Helps me with my frequent clean installs. Is there a way where I can add Open with Notepad++ in the right click menu? Would be convenient.

        Neil SchipperN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mmjoshiM
          mmjoshi @PeterJones
          last edited by

          @PeterJones I am more inclined to not replace Notepad with Notepad++. However, since I use the portable version, is there a way to have the “Open with Notepad++” in the right click menu? Would be very convenient, especially opening the .bat or .reg files.

          PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Neil SchipperN
            Neil Schipper @mmjoshi
            last edited by

            @mmjoshi

            I have low tech suggestions only, and they’re only useful if your installs use a very consistent dir structure, ie, most apps & data files usually in the same place… (and sorry if you already know all this)

            1. Maintain a subdir full of shortcuts that each launch Np++ to open one (or several) of the (5? 20?) files you expect to edit, that might cover 90%+ of your needs. (Of course, you’d maintain a master copy of that subdir on a memory stick, cloud, etc.)

            2. A batch file, run once, could copy shortcuts to Np++ (with or without a target file specified) to “all” the places where your editables normally reside.

            3. Learn to hack the appropriate Np++ xml file so that the files/places you care about magically appear in Np++ (in the session file, in Project Panels, in Recently Closed Files list) the first time you start it after a clean install.

              Again, if installs are highly uniform, you don’t have to hack; rather, learn which config files capture your finely tuned Np++ environment, keep them safe, and always restore with each install.

              Or, run portable Np++ with its config environment from a mem stick. You’ll always be refining it (or even them – an environment for each type of install), and it will always be ready to go after an install.

              So Np++ will be sort of acting like WinExplr for frequently accessed files. Also, preferences like colors, fonts, shortcuts, etc. will always be at hand

            Sorry if you already know all of this. I expect someone will figure out how to do what you’re really asking for in not too long.

            mmjoshiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • PeterJonesP
              PeterJones @mmjoshi
              last edited by

              @mmjoshi ,

              I do not have Windows 11 to verify. However, on Windows 10 and earlier, if you go into the registry, in HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Classes\*\shell, and right click “New Key”, add one named something like Notepad++, set the (Default) for Notepad++ to Edit with Notepad++; then right clock on the Notepad++ on the left, add a new key command, and set the (Default) to something like "C:\usr\local\apps\notepad++\notepad++.exe" "%1" (where you would use your path to notepad++.exe, not my path).

              Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
              
              [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Classes\*\shell\Notepad++]
              @="Edit With Notepad++"
              
              [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Classes\*\shell\Notepad++\command]
              @="\"C:\\usr\\local\\apps\\notepad++\\notepad++.exe\" \"%1\""
              

              However, as I said earlier, it looks like Windows 11 doesn’t always show all the verbs; you can use your favorite search engine to search the internet for windows 11 not showing all right-click actions or similar; I do not have Win11, so cannot do tests to tell you what exactly will work.

              mmjoshiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • mmjoshiM
                mmjoshi @Neil Schipper
                last edited by

                @Neil-Schipper Thanks for your suggestion. Ultimately figured out a way to add “Open with Notepad++” to the right click menu in Windows 11. Takes care of my needs. Boy, Windows 11 is surely tough to customize to the ways one worked in Windows 10!

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • mmjoshiM
                  mmjoshi @PeterJones
                  last edited by

                  @PeterJones Thanks. Worked in Windows 11 too! Windows 11 has certainly made it harder to be customized to the look and feel of Windows 10!

                  cipher-1024C Dome TorretoD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • cipher-1024C
                    cipher-1024 @mmjoshi
                    last edited by

                    A little late to the party but if you’re using a portable version, you can add it to the “Send To” list on a context menu by opening File Explorer, putting “shell:sendto” in the address bar, and in that directory add a new shortcut to your portable Notepad++.exe. Hopefully SendTo isn’t borked in Windows 11 too.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • jadeliseJ
                      jadelise
                      last edited by

                      Here is a possible solution for those who want to replace Notepad.exe with NotePad++.

                      The previous hack still works if you set the redirection registry settings underneath it. The following batch file code shows a solution.

                      @ECHO OFF & CLS & ECHO.
                      NET FILE 1>NUL 2>NUL & IF ERRORLEVEL 1 (ECHO You must right-click and select &  ECHO "RUN AS ADMINISTRATOR"  to run this batch. Exiting... & ECHO. &  Timeout /t 10 & EXIT /B)
                      REM ... proceed here with admin rights ...
                      REM http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7044985/how-can-i-auto-elevate-my-batch-file-so-that-it-requests-from-uac-administrator
                      SETLOCAL
                      ::
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe" /v "Debugger" /t REG_SZ /d "\"%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad++.exe\" -notepadStyleCmdline -z" /f
                      
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\0" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" /f
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\1" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" /f
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\2" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" /f
                      
                      ::Use the the following comment to undo the replacement:
                      
                      :: reg delete "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe" /v "Debugger" /f
                      
                      
                      ENDLOCAL
                      GOTO :EOF
                      
                      Technical Notes
                      Replace Notepad on Windows 11
                      
                      The following code Reverses the change
                      ```@ECHO OFF & CLS & ECHO.
                      NET FILE 1>NUL 2>NUL & IF ERRORLEVEL 1 (ECHO You must right-click and select &  ECHO "RUN AS ADMINISTRATOR"  to run this batch. Exiting... & ECHO. &  Timeout /t 10 & EXIT /B)
                      REM ... proceed here with admin rights ...
                      REM http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7044985/how-can-i-auto-elevate-my-batch-file-so-that-it-requests-from-uac-administrator
                      SETLOCAL
                      
                      
                      ::Use the the following to Reset the default for Windows 11 notepad.exe to undo the replacement by Notepad++
                      
                      reg delete "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe" /v "Debugger" /f
                      
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\0" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad.exe" /f
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\1" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad.exe" /f
                      reg add "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe\2" /v "FilterFullPath" /t REG_SZ /d "%ProgramFiles%\Notepad++\notepad.exe" /f
                      
                      
                      
                      ENDLOCAL
                      GOTO :EOF
                      
                      Technical Notes
                      Replace Notepad
                      
                      This has only been lightly tested but works for .cmd files and .txt files and perhaps others.  Let us know if there are issues.
                      ChaosDMNSC donhoD Marcel BosmaM Christian JanssenC 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • ChaosDMNSC
                        ChaosDMNS @jadelise
                        last edited by

                        @jadelise Thanx… works great.

                        Ahmed AnssaienA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • Ahmed AnssaienA
                          Ahmed Anssaien @ChaosDMNS
                          last edited by Ahmed Anssaien

                          @ChaosDMNS Yup, it works! I’ve just tried it on Win11 22H2. Thanks, @jadelise ! 🙏🏻

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • donhoD
                            donho @jadelise
                            last edited by donho

                            @jadelise

                            Are you sure the batch file you provided still works in Windows 11?
                            I’ve tried it but it doesn’t work (*.txt are double clicked, but always notepad.exe is launched) on my Windows 11 Home Edition version 21H2.
                            ps. I didn’t uninstall notepad.exe

                            Edit: Obviously, Notepad UWP has to be removed to make it work: (https://www.winhelponline.com/blog/replace-notepad-text-editor-notepad-plus-association/)
                            I used powershell (admin) command Get-AppxPackage *Microsoft.WindowsNotepad* | Remove-AppxPackage to remove Notepad.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • Dome TorretoD
                              Dome Torreto @mmjoshi
                              last edited by donho

                              i was facing same issue but now it helps me alot… thanks

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Marcel BosmaM
                                Marcel Bosma @jadelise
                                last edited by

                                @jadelise

                                Amazing, that was the tweak i needed,

                                Running PS 7.5 within Win Terminal, i’m bound to wins terminal business related, but a big downside is not being able to switch out the core text editor, MS pushing their own products i get it. upside is now i don’t have to keystroke 2 times a ++ when editing is needed hehe,

                                so big big thanks and head off to you sir 🫡

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Christian JanssenC
                                  Christian Janssen @jadelise
                                  last edited by

                                  @jadelise

                                  FTW! - Many thanks for providing the solution (the nice simple hack the user asked for) - tested on 24H2.

                                  Now I can (finally, after years!) right click on and edit .cmd files. What a relief not to be nagged to install an new version of notepad (even though I have explicitly removed the UWP instance of notepad from the user’s profile. (next – looking for a way to do that globally for the machine. I thought I did so quite a while ago with win10 and “mail and calendar”, but I could very well be mistaken.)

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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