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    Updating Notepad++ Using Zip File

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    • Alan KilbornA
      Alan Kilborn @Ekopalypse
      last edited by

      @Ekopalypse

      You’re probably missing those plugins you used to have, after that.

      ;-)

      EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • EkopalypseE
        Ekopalypse @Alan Kilborn
        last edited by

        @Alan-Kilborn

        No, because unzipping a new version doesn’t delete files,
        it only overwrites existing :-)

        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Alan KilbornA
          Alan Kilborn @Ekopalypse
          last edited by

          @Ekopalypse

          I guess I didn’t think too much about your entire workflow. :)

          But, taken as a whole, with the OP’s:

          Copy specific files from the new downloaded Zip file to my current Onedrive folder?

          …it does make sense.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • Prahlad-Makwana4145P
            Prahlad-Makwana4145
            last edited by

            Hello, @Loren-Schoepke

            Follow these steps to update notepad++ using zip file :

            Step 1:- Open Run Dialog by clicking Start->run (Notepade++ should be closed).
            Step 2:- Copy this text %APPDATA%\Notepad++ into the text field of Run Dialog.
            Step 3:- Click ok. A folder named Notepad++ will appear.
            Step 4:- Delete these two files : config.xml and stylers.xml.
            Step 5:- After deleting files unzip the zip file.
            Step 6:- After Unzip Launch Notepad++.

            I hope above information will be useful for you.
            Thank you.

            andrecool-68A Loren SchoepkeL 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • andrecool-68A
              andrecool-68 @Prahlad-Makwana4145
              last edited by

              @Prahlad-Makwana4145
              This will delete all existing your existing program settings.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • andrecool-68A
                andrecool-68 @Ekopalypse
                last edited by

                @Ekopalypse
                If you add a copy of the directory with plugins to your script … it will be perfect!

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • EkopalypseE
                  Ekopalypse
                  last edited by

                  @andrecool-68
                  Hmmm, you and @Alan-Kilborn must have something in mind
                  which I’m either not using or unaware of.

                  Why do you think that there is a need to include plugins directory?
                  I’m using this procedure since a while now and I never came across
                  an issue that the plugins directory got corrupted.

                  My understanding of unzipping something is, that only those files in
                  the current unzip_directory get modified which are part of the zip and
                  others do get untouched.
                  If files in a zip aren’t in the current unzip_directory they get created.

                  What do I miss?

                  Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • Alan KilbornA
                    Alan Kilborn @Ekopalypse
                    last edited by

                    @Ekopalypse

                    What do I miss?

                    Probably nothing, just different ways and desired ways of updating (in a manual way). Plugins, however, are easy; just copy an entire folder tree from one version to another.

                    Here’s my somewhat more in-depth way (compared to your method above) of upgrading the rest:

                    Version A = version I have
                    Version B = version I’m going to

                    • do a file tree compare on an freshly unzipped portable of A and B, noting any differences in files and file contents
                    • copy A’s configuration files into B’s tree
                    • hand-edit in any new feature’s configuration stuff into the configuration files now in B
                    • start using version B

                    Maybe the adding of new feature config stuff isn’t strictly necessary, but I always do it, just in case. [An example of might be English.xml or English_customizable.xml. If you don’t find out what the new stuff is in version B, and add it in to what you had going from version A, you can’t customize it later.]

                    Usually this is not a intense undertaking, but it can be if you let several versions go by without updating.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • Loren SchoepkeL
                      Loren Schoepke @Ekopalypse
                      last edited by

                      @Ekopalypse

                      Thanks. This worked great!!!

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • Loren SchoepkeL
                        Loren Schoepke @Prahlad-Makwana4145
                        last edited by

                        @Prahlad-Makwana4145

                        Didn’t have a “Notepad++” folder". Not sure, but I think this gets created if you do an install. I just used ZIP file.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • PeterJonesP
                          PeterJones
                          last edited by

                          @Loren-Schoepke said in Updating Notepad++ Using Zip File:

                          Didn’t have a “Notepad++” folder". Not sure, but I think this gets created if you do an install. I just used ZIP file.

                          You are correct. By default, an installer-version will use %AppData%\Notepad++ for storing configuration files and a zip (“portable”) version will just use the zip directory (because that’s part of what makes it “portable”).

                          If you would like to maintain a separate %AppData%\Notepad++ but use the zip version, you can delete the doLocalConf.xml from the Notepad+±unzip directory; after that, the next time you run Notepad++, the %AppData%\Notepad++ folder will be created and populated; however, it might* not use the same settings that were in your zipfolder before. (*: caveat = I’ve only tried the deletion of doLocalConf.xml to auto-populate %AppData%\Notepad++ once, and wasn’t specifically looking for this feature, so I didn’t store it in long-term memory; I know it created the folder properly; my memory says that it used default config files, not copies of what’s in your zipfolder, but I could be wrong.)

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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