Jobs & Education4 mins ago
Wordpad / Notepad Conundrum
9 Answers
Windows 10 comes with Notepad only. I have got Wordpad onto the taskbar but it's not in the list of Open with. Only Notepad is there and it's difficult to use as the lines don't wrap.
The only way I can get to work in Wordpad is to copy the text from Notepad and Paste into Wordpad, then vice versa - a nuisance. Is it possible to get Wordpad listed in the Open with box?
The only way I can get to work in Wordpad is to copy the text from Notepad and Paste into Wordpad, then vice versa - a nuisance. Is it possible to get Wordpad listed in the Open with box?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Never saw much use for Wordpad. Notepad is an adequate text viewer/editor for most things. Anything more use a word processor or a programmer's text editor with bells & whistles.
Notepad will wrap lines on the screen if you set it. It's just that it doesn't add control characters when saving. It saves the text.
Going from a flawed memory, isn't there a subdirectory somewhere that holds the shortcuts for programs that appear in the 'open with' ? I may be wrong but I think adding a Wordpad shortcut there may add it to the right click menu.
Notepad will wrap lines on the screen if you set it. It's just that it doesn't add control characters when saving. It saves the text.
Going from a flawed memory, isn't there a subdirectory somewhere that holds the shortcuts for programs that appear in the 'open with' ? I may be wrong but I think adding a Wordpad shortcut there may add it to the right click menu.
>>> Never saw much use for Wordpad
That makes two of us! I've been using Windows computers for over twenty years and I can probably count the number of times I've used Wordpad on the fingers of one hand. With excellent word processor programs (as good as, or better than, Microsoft Word) available for free (e.g. OpenOffice Writer) there would seem to be little point in using clunky old Wordpad at all.
That makes two of us! I've been using Windows computers for over twenty years and I can probably count the number of times I've used Wordpad on the fingers of one hand. With excellent word processor programs (as good as, or better than, Microsoft Word) available for free (e.g. OpenOffice Writer) there would seem to be little point in using clunky old Wordpad at all.
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