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    • PeterJonesP
      PeterJones @garrett carey
      last edited by PeterJones

      @garrett-carey said in Question(s):

      Would there be a plugin to add it?

      There would be a plugin if you want to “bold” or “italic” using HTML markup.

      What you appear to be asking for is impossible for a text file. If some plugin gave you that ability in Notepad++ by defining a propriety storage format, they would have essentially made a Word Processing application, with it’s own unique save file, and it would cease to be a text file that you were editing. If you want to edit a text file, use a text file like Notepad++. If you want to edit a “pretty document”, use a Word Processor (like MS Word, or LibreOffice Writer, or any other word processor).

      A text file edited in Notepad++ will have all the same information as that same text file edited in MS Notepad or Sublime Text or Atom or VSCode or any other text editor that can be used on a modern computer. If you expect Notepad++ to somehow embed formatting information in that, you will either make that text file incompatible with any other text editor (meaning it’s not actually a text file any more) or you are talking about a markup/markdown language, which I already said was covered by plugins for that particular language.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • PeterJonesP
        PeterJones @garrett carey
        last edited by

        @garrett-carey ,

        New FAQ: Notepad++ is a Text Editor, not a Word Processor

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • garrett careyG
          garrett carey
          last edited by

          Also is there a setting to disable text lines?

          Lycan ThropeL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Lycan ThropeL
            Lycan Thrope @garrett carey
            last edited by Lycan Thrope

            @garrett-carey ,
            You’re going to have to be a little bit more specific, because I have no idea what you’re referring to.

            garrett careyG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • garrett careyG
              garrett carey @Lycan Thrope
              last edited by

              @Lycan-Thrope Nevermind I found out what it was and it’s good now. Also is it possible to restore tabs (not sure what happened but all my tabs I had opened went away.

              mkupperM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • mkupperM
                mkupper @garrett carey
                last edited by

                @garrett-carey said in Question(s):

                Also is it possible to restore tabs (not sure what happened but all my tabs I had opened went away.

                Notepad++ itself does not have a built-in mechanism to archive copies of its configuration or settings files. Notepad++ stores all of its configurations/settings in plain text files.

                The list of tabs is stored in the session.xml file. If you maintain backups of your computer then restore the version of session.xml that has the list of tabs that you are interested in.

                garrett careyG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • garrett careyG
                  garrett carey @mkupper
                  last edited by

                  @mkupper Also is there a setting in notepad++ to change default zoom?

                  Jonathan JohansenJ PeterJonesP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Jonathan JohansenJ
                    Jonathan Johansen @garrett carey
                    last edited by

                    @garrett-carey If you hold the Control button while scrolling with your mouse, it should change the zoom level. Your current zoom level is restored between sessions, so it is the default zoom level.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • PeterJonesP
                      PeterJones @garrett carey
                      last edited by

                      @garrett-carey said in Question(s):

                      Also is there a setting in notepad++ to change default zoom?

                      @Jonathan-Johansen replied with,

                      Your current zoom level is restored between sessions, so it is the default zoom level.

                      I was dubious about that reply, but was able to confirm it. Since I’ve always used zoom as a temporary thing (and Ctrl+Num/ to reset), I don’t remember ever noticing that the zoom is actually saved in the preferences (config.xml > GUIConfig name="ScintillaPrimaryView" > Attributes zoom and zoom2 – which is kindof funny that there are two, since N++ forces both zooms to be the same, so if I exit with two views visible, externally edit config.xml to set zoom="0" zoom2="60" and open again, both views will be at full zoom; however, if I exit with only primary view visible, set zoom="0" zoom2="60" and open again, it will open no zoom (ie, 100%); ooh, fun, I can confuse it: if I had 0/60 when I loaded with one View, then open or clone a file into the other View to get it to show both, then it will use different zoom sizes that run; if I exit and rerun in that condition, it will use the 60-zoom for both, and save the config.xml with both zooms at 60 next time.)

                      But back to @garrett-carey’s question: Setting “default” zoom actually seems unneeded to me. If you really want to start with a different text size as your normal text size, instead of using “Zoom”, why not just change your default font size? Settings > Style Configurator > Language: Global Styles > Style: Default Style and set Font Style > Font Size: ___ to something bigger. This way, 100%-zoom will be relative to the font size you actually want. (Most themes correctly inherit all the indvidual styles’s font-size from the Default Style for that font, so it should, in general, work across normal text and all the languages in your chosen theme.)

                      Alan KilbornA CoisesC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
                      • Alan KilbornA
                        Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
                        last edited by

                        @PeterJones said:

                        …zoom is actually saved in the preferences (config.xml > GUIConfig name=“ScintillaPrimaryView” > Attributes zoom and zoom2 – which is kindof funny that there are two, since N++ forces both zooms to be the same, so if I exit with two views visible, externally edit config.xml to set zoom=“0” zoom2=“60” and open again, both views will be at full zoom; however, if I exit with only primary view visible, set zoom=“0” zoom2=“60” and open again, it will open no zoom (ie, 100%); ooh, fun, I can confuse it: if I had 0/60 when I loaded with one View, then open or clone a file into the other View to get it to show both, then it will use different zoom sizes that run; if I exit and rerun in that condition, it will use the 60-zoom for both, and save the config.xml with both zooms at 60 next time.)

                        Is this worthy of creating an official issue, so that (in theory) these things get fixed, i.e., cleaned up?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • CoisesC
                          Coises @PeterJones
                          last edited by

                          @PeterJones said in Question(s):

                          If you really want to start with a different text size as your normal text size, instead of using “Zoom”, why not just change your default font size?

                          I routinely work “zoomed” because the font size also affects printing. Though I don’t print often, if I set the font size to be large enough for me to read easily on screen, it’s way too large for efficient printing.

                          mkupperM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                          • mkupperM
                            mkupper @Coises
                            last edited by

                            @Coises said in Question(s):

                            I routinely work “zoomed” because the font size also affects printing. Though I don’t print often, if I set the font size to be large enough for me to read easily on screen, it’s way too large for efficient printing.

                            I had not noticed that the zoom size affects the printing. That surprised me as I regularly change the zoom and have a one page report I print weekly. I know that with my printer that a printed page is 67 lines with 94 characters per line. Thus, before printing the weekly thing I check the line length and that it’s 67 or less lines. The printed pages have always been 67 × 94 despite that I may be zoomed in or out at the time.

                            I verified that at least for my current setup that the zoom level seems to have no affect on the printed results.

                            A minor Notepad++ printing annoyance for me is that words that DSpellCheck deems to be misspelled have red underlines in the printed pages. Thus I need to remember to ALT+A to disable DSpellCheck, print, and then ALT+A to re-enable automatic spell checking.

                            CoisesC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • CoisesC
                              Coises @mkupper
                              last edited by

                              @mkupper said in Question(s):

                              I verified that at least for my current setup that the zoom level seems to have no affect on the printed results.

                              Same here. Perhaps I was unclear.

                              If I leave the zoom at default and adjust the font size for Default Style to be large enough for me to read easily on my monitor, I would set a font size of 14 or 16 points with Liberation Mono. (14 is bit smaller than I like, 16 is too big, 15 isn’t an option.) Those are too large for printing, though.

                              If I set Default Style to 12 points, printing is reasonable. If I then zoom in 3 steps, I’m just about where I want to be to read easily on the screen — without affecting printing.

                              The question I was answering was, “Why not just change your default font size?” Because that does affect printing (and, though I hadn’t remembered until I tried just now, also isn’t as fine-grained as zoom).

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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