View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.
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You cannot. That list of browsers is hardcoded into Notepad++'s application as a result of EU-FOSSA security reviews.
However, the Run > Run menu allows you to run any command from your computer, with the arguments you supply it; and there is a list of “variables” here which allow you to pass information to those external programs. So do a Run > Run with command
"c:\path to\browser\browser.exe" "$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)"
(yes, use the quotes) will run your chosen browser with the path to the active file – so as long as browser.exe takes a filepath as an argument to tell it to open that file in the browser, that should be sufficient. Save that to a named entry in the Run menu, and maybe assigning a shortcut, et voila, you have a “Run in MySuperBrowser” menu entry (and shortcut).Enjoy.
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@PeterJones - So… are you telling me that (the totally defunct / deprecated) IE is preferred over browsers such as Opera and Brave…? What about “Use Default Browser” in Windows ?? Let users decide what browser(s) to use - and not some EU-baloney!!
“Run” is only good? for a few HTML files… not if you have many! -
@JHV-JHV ,
are you telling me that […] IE is preferred over browsers such as Opera and Brave…
I never said that, and I never would. But what is true is that the developers* decided to include those specific browsers, and left in methods for accessing others (ie, the Run menu)
What about “Use Default Browser” in Windows
Run > Run >
cmd /c "$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)"
– This is exactly equivalent to double clicking a file in Windows File ExplorerLet users decide what browser(s) to use - and not some EU-baloney!!
Letting users run any command they want on the current file is exactly what the run menu is for.
And EU-FOSSA isn’t baloney, especially since the primary developer lives in the EU.
“Run” is only good?
I am not sure what the question mark is doing there. I assume maybe you were trying to “ask a question” (though it’s poorly phrased), and then answer it in the same line, that follows after. I will simplify that to the assertion I believe you are trying to make by removing the
?
:“Run” is only good for a few HTML files… not if you have many!
I cannot see how any data supports this assertion. There is no difference between having to run Run > MySavedRunValue (or the keyboard equivalent) many times to open many files, compared to having to run the View > View Current File In > SomeBrowser the same number of times to open the same number of files in your browser.
If you mean, “because I have to type the Run command every time”, then you did not understand that Run commands can be saved – permanently. I have run commands that I saved years ago, that I still use on a daily basis.
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@PeterJones said in View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.:
“Run” is only good for a few HTML files… not if you have many
Probably the poster thinks they have to create one Run menu entry for each HTML file they might want to “view in browser”?? If so, it is certainly not true.
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Cheers:
This question was already partially answered above:You can copy the following line into your Npp root directory shortcuts.xml file.
<Command name="Command description" Ctrl="no" Alt="yes" Shift="no" Key="116">C:\directory\browser.exe C:\directory\document.htm</Command>
Replace in each part the description of what it does, the full path of the browser and the full path of the document
<Command name="View in browser Opera-EN_en" Ctrl="no" Alt="yes" Shift="no" Key="116">C:\opera\opera.exe C:\My_projects\My_web_page.htm</Command>
Ctrl="no" Alt="yes" Shift="no" Key="116"
is the combination Alt+F5 shortcut,I think are free:
Alt+F3
Alt+F5
Alt+F7
Alt+F8
Alt+F9You could use each keyboard shortcut for a different browser.
Following an analogous method, I changed the operation of F1 to put the user manual help there.There may be $(CURRENT_FILE) to refer to the current or visible document in Npp… you just need to have saved it.
Have a good day and success.
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@JHV-JHV
No offense:
ha ha ha … Windows couldn’t do with its IE what it did with Wordperfect when it programmed Word office because it was the support system. But hey, Edge brings it :) -
@José-Luis-Montero-Castellanos ,
<Command name="Command description" Ctrl="no" Alt="yes" Shift="no" Key="116">C:\directory\browser.exe C:\directory\document.htm</Command>
No! Please no! That’s exactly what the JHV was complaining about. You do NOT want to have to make a separate shortcut for every single file you might ever open in your browser!
The syntax I showed, where the Run command used is
"c:\path to\browser\browser.exe" "$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)"
, is 100% the answer that @Clyde-Darby should use.By using the Run dialog’s Save button, Clyde won’t have to go mucking about in the shortcuts.xml – you can just save the shortcut after pasting it into the field and then hitting Save and giving it a meaningful name.
(The Save->Shortcut dialog even allows you to pick the keyboard shortcut. Which is again, so much easier than the mucking about in shortcuts.xml.)You continue,
There may be
$(CURRENT_FILE)
to refer to the current or visible document in Npp… you just need to have saved it.That’s half true. But
$(CURRENT_FILE)
does not contain the full path to the file. And browser.exe cannot know what the “current directory” is for Notepad++. So if you tried that, browser.exe would complain that it couldn’t finddocument.htm
. To get around that, use the$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)
variable that I already showed. And the quotes are put around it because$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)
may have spaces in itAll the
$(...)
variables available to the Run menu are described in the usermanual here. -
@PeterJones
You are right you cannot create a command for each document, I just put it as an example, which I adjusted by referring to the variable $(CURRENT_FILE). And I’m glad to get the clarification regarding the use of “$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)”. I thought to edit it so as not to confuse, or leave it as it is with the inaccuracy, so that your comment and mine make sense and be honest.We always learn something. :)
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@José-Luis-Montero-Castellanos said in View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.:
I thought to edit it so as not to confuse, or leave it as it is with the inaccuracy,
It is generally considered rude to change the meaning of a post after people have replied to that post. Please do not change that previous post at this point.
so that your comment and mine make sense
This is one of the reasons that it’s considered rude to change a post that has replies: changing the meaning of a conversation is a bad idea, because it will confuse all future readers (including you, when you come back days or weeks or months later and wonder why someone replied the way they did when you’ve forgotten that you edited it)
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@PeterJones
Understood… :¬) -
@PeterJones …I understand the difference between the two : C:\directory\browser.exe C:\directory\document.htm -and- c:\path to\browser\browser.exe" "$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)
“?” meaning -> the “best practice” is to let users choose their default browser (under “View Current File In”) and not to micromanage browser choice which seems to be the main argument for the “Run”-thing. It’s the “logic” which eludes me! Why would a thing e.g. like “Use Default Browser” have to be emulated by the “Run” command…?
Now, I didn’t read any of all this EU-FOSSA crap… but you don’t honestly believe that the EU actually advocates for using IE in the year 2022… do you :-?Correct me if I’m wrong here, but IE was completely removed in Windows 11…? You already got MS-Edge to somewhat emulate the behavior of IE, if needed…?
IE ought to be replaced by “Use Default Browser” - and you would pretty much cover most browser cases, used today, and in the easiest manner there is!
There are probably other people struggling with this too… -
Reference:
It certainly seems reasonable that a “Default Application” choice could be added above Firefox, perhaps with a menu separator between the two.
One of Notepad++'s strengths is that it will run on older systems, and perhaps a lot of these older systems have IE or even Firefox on them. So it does no harm to keep these menu entries.
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@JHV-JHV said in View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.:
but you don’t honestly believe that the EU actually advocates for using IE in the year 2022… do you :-?
You don’t honestly believe I said that, do you?
You are fighting at strawmen, and not listening to my replies. After this post, I am done with this discussion.
IE ought to be replaced by “Use Default Browser”
Like Alan, I think “Use Default Browser” should be added to the list. But for that to happen, someone would have to make a polite feature request in the right location.
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@JHV-JHV
Greetings from Colombia:IE ought to be replaced by “Use Default Browser” -
Totally agree, if my preferred browser “then the default” is called let’s say “Anonymous” and other users’ “defaults” have 15 different names , an option like this would cover them all!, including IE for older systems.
Now if I need a range of browsers to see IF my page is displayed in each of them, (matter that seemed to me the essence of this request for help!) then the use of RUN command is a good option, but I think it is less extensive. Since the leftover and contiguous keyboard shortcuts are reduced, not listed and memorizing them is not simple.
Another option would be that the list in View > view current file in… be more extensive or editable (expandable), but including Default Browser… (NOTE: it is not a request!!!).
Personal opinion: That is why traditional browsers that claim to respect our privacy, are the first to violate it, updating when they feel like it, for example.
Have a nice day and success…
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@PeterJones said in View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.:
Like Alan, I think “Use Default Browser” should be added to the list
Note that Alan didn’t say Default Browser, Alan said Default Application.
While apparently this View Current File in top-level menu has been used for browsers in the past, not everyone edits html or other web content.
Default Application would be the equivalent of what happens when one invokes the Run dialog like this:
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I think “Use Default Browser” should be added to the list
Default Application would be the equivalent of what happens when one invokes the Run dialog like this…
There’s also:
which, for a .html or other “web file” associated with a browser, would effectively be “Open in Default Browser”.
So, developers would probably push back (as redundant) on adding “Use Default Browser” to the View Current File in menu.
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perfect!
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And keyboard shortcuts can be assigned to menu commands by choosing run > modify shortcut and switch to the Main Menu tab on the Shortcut Mapper.
It would be good to have the Open in Default Browser be located in either the View or Run Menus, but creating a shortcut works for me.
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Notepad++ is actually two completely different editors in one, thereby making some chores unnecessarily complicated. What I’m seeing is that the HTML editor with the “View file in . . .” is a fundamentally different tool than an NPP used for editing Python (or C or Pascal or . . .) files. For HTML files, it always works, and it’s exceptionally useful.
However, NPP used for other languages is a real pain since it’s buggy and erratic, and comes with that horrid “Language” tool which fails more times than it works.
Is it too much to hope for that NPP could be separated into an HTML/PHP/Javascript editor and an editor for “all the others”? Then maybe some effort could be put into fixing up a separate “all the other languages” version?
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@James-Burke-0 said in View...How do I add browsers, so that I may run a program from different browsers.:
Notepad++ is actually two completely different editors in one,
If you want to maintain that it’s one editor with two different purposes, I can see how someone could make that argument… but I fundamentally disagree even with that. But to claim it’s really two merged editors together is (IMO) completely undefensible.
It is designed as a programmer’s file editor, useful for exiting plaintext and any text-based source code you want.
thereby making some chores unnecessarily complicated.
What chores? Be specific.
What I’m seeing is that the HTML editor with the “View file in . . .” is a fundamentally different tool than an NPP used for editing Python (or C or Pascal or . . .) files. For HTML files, it always works, and it’s exceptionally useful.
And then you go and say the opposite of what I expect you to say, based on your introductory assertion. From my experience, in seeing nearly a decade of complaints and questions here, the biggest complaint from people who want to edit HTML in Notepad++ is that the extra step of having to launch an external browser is an onerous task, and they complain that they really want Notepad++ to be a WYSIWYG editor, which it is never going to be: their complaint is exactly the opposite of yours, namely, that because it’s not WYSIWYG, it’s not a good HTML editor.
However, NPP used for other languages is a real pain since it’s buggy and erratic,
Be specific. I love coding in languages other than HTML in Notepad++ , and I haven’t seen anything that would make me claim it’s “buggy and erratic” for everything but HTML.
and comes with that horrid “Language” tool which fails more times than it works.
What do you mean by the “Language” tool? The Language menu is a list of about 90 different programming languages which Notepad++ can syntax highlight right out of the box. There might be a few quirks in a couple of those 90 languages, but all-in-all, it’s a great experience for the syntax highlighting.
If you’re talking about the User Defined Language feature, where you add keywords and style definitions, then I would say it works great for the simple cases (ie, simple keywords and operators), but does have limitations if you are trying to do complex syntax highlighting. But with 90 languages defined in such a way that you don’t need to do UDL for them (including the C or Pascal that you specifically enumerated), so the UDL won’t affect you for that.
If you’re talking about the lack of modern LSP (“Language Server Protocol”) support, so that it could behave more like VS/VSCode: true, it doesn’t have native LSP support, but there’s at least one plugin that implements an LSP client for Notepad++: NppLspClient. The app developer has never shown an interest in adding native LSP support to Notepad++, because he likes the current keyword-based language system
which fails more times than it works.
So what specific failures are you talking about? I would absolutely disagree with that assessment, after having used Notepad++ specifically for its language features for more than 15 years. So my experience is apparently very different than yours.
Is it too much to hope for that NPP could be separated into an HTML/PHP/Javascript editor and an editor for “all the others”?
That would be awful. I only want to use one text editor, and I want it to work right, whether I’m in HTML/PHP/Javascript or in Perl or Python or C++. That’s what Notepad++ is, for me.
Then maybe some effort could be put into fixing up a separate “all the other languages” version?
What specific effort do you think has been ignored, regarding “all the other languages”. (And, in fact, in my experience, I’ve seen very little effort put into anything related to HTML/PHP/JS, and instead most of the effort is in other things.)