From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: davida@pobox.com (David Arnold) Date: Fri, 11 May 2018 12:16:26 +1000 Subject: [TUHS] Windows Notepad to support Unix line endings In-Reply-To: <1cfffd7b-4490-7ebc-d892-b603d8312f9d@spamtrap.tnetconsulting.net> References: <88495996-4947-4DAD-962F-62022DF76FED@robdiamond.com> <8e31213a-4741-a7d7-f102-526658251ade@spamtrap.tnetconsulting.net> <1cfffd7b-4490-7ebc-d892-b603d8312f9d@spamtrap.tnetconsulting.net> Message-ID: <303AF181-6500-4ECC-BAE8-4D839D6CB8CF@pobox.com> The upside for me as someone who packages software for Windows is that I can have README.txt, LICENSE.txt, etc, files in the Windows package and they’ll work out of the box for people who haven’t done the reconfiguration dance you describe. Previously, I’ve had to run unix2dos on all the text files in the Windows package. So in a few years when I stop supporting anything older than Windows-10.whatever-this-one-is-called, I’ll be able to simplify my packaging scripts slightly. As you say … not really worthy of the hype. d > On 10 May 2018, at 08:23, Grant Taylor via TUHS wrote: > > On 05/09/2018 03:57 PM, David Arnold wrote: >> Double-click on a .txt file will invoke Notepad, unless you’ve reconfigured things. > > Right-click on a .txt file > Left-click on Open With > Left-click on Wordpad > (Optionally) Left-click on "always use this program…" > > Sure, it's a preference change. But it's a user level preference. > > Is it nice that Notepad will now open files with unix new lines? Sure. > > Do I think it's worth some of the hype that I'm seeing? Nope. > > > > -- > Grant. . . . > unix || die >