After 40 years of being free Microsoft has added a paywall to Notepad
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They have different use cases. Notepad++ is for manipulating text, strings, and code. It's got very powerful tools for it.
Word is for making things look pretty. You can change typefaces, fonts, size. You can add pictures and diagrams and arrange them on the page.
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I like how sublime looks. But it is absolutely ridiculous that is has no settings UI and expects you to go and manually edit a json file to change even basic settings. Insane. So that's a no from me.
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Holy moly, that works? I needed precisely that feature earlier! Nice.
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Genuinely very useful, however I feel that can be achieved without a login and paid AI subscription.
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I like Kate as a program but man KDE need to change how some of their app names appear in Plasma.
A new user looking through their start menu and seeing "Kate" will have no idea it's a text editor/notepad. The same is true for multiple other programs.
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The search and replace UX is 10 years behind. The sole reason I use sublime text instead
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There is actually an option to do that iirc. You can have it show entry descriptions.
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What does "Excel" do? What does "Steam" do? What does "Balena" do? What does "Conky" do?
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Npp has normal, with special characters and regex, does sublime has something better there?
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They said UI, so I don't think they meant features. But honestly I've never been unhappy with their UI, aside from one day with multiple replaces across a few files where the autofill from clipboard kept deleting the expression I wanted to be in there as I navigated through what I needed to do.
But that was fine, anyway, it got through it and I'm just happy with the "apply to all open documents" setting. Saved me at least an hour.
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The regex engine was not full featured last time I tried. Done know which implementation they use, but it was lacking basic features like end of line matching (if I remember correctly).
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People at Microsoft doesn't understand what people use Notepad for.
If they wanted to add AI features, they should have added it to WordPad, and make it more modern.
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I think programs that we think of as being part of the OS, such as the included text editor, is a very different thing to something like Steam.
Steam isn't preinstalled on your PC, it's not a core part of your desktop OS. You download Steam yourself, and you only do it once you know what it is.
Besides, even if that weren't the case, another dev doing it doesn't mean KDE should.
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Clickbait.
Notepad is still free. If you want to use Rewrite, then you pay for that. -
I usually use my work laptop for personal bits and bobs which is Ubuntu but I turned on my personal Microsoft PC recently to do some stuff and couldn't believe all the pop-ups and noise! I promptly moved all my data onto a external drive and did a fresh install of Ubuntu.
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Indeed. That's what I do on my Plasma system, it's a good option.
But a new user or someone who isn't technical won't see that, they don't go digging through settings in each app, they just use the defaults.
I guess a solid compromise would be to enable this by default, and anybody who doesn't like that short descriptor can disable it.
But IMO nothing will beat the no-nonsense straightforwardness of calling OS apps immediately intuitive names. This is something I believe Gnome gets right. Go onto their GitHub and their file manager is called Nautilus, but on your system it will default to being called "Files", because they know everyone will understand what "Files" is but a lot of people would ask "Wtf is Nautilus??", same goes for other apps, e.g. "Loupe" appearing as "Image Viewer".
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Heck, it probably can be done with a regex. (Yeah, I know)
There's no need to kill three forests just to do the exact same work you could have done by opening your dataset in Excel.
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Yeah but no one uses wordpad. They put it in notepad for the exact reason you're saying: because people use it.