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February 6, 2008 4:52 PM PST

Take note of these Notepad replacements

by Seth Rosenblatt

Loved for its simplicity, Notepad has long been a staple for serious coders. Fast to load and possessing a tiny footprint, it's a great way to handle chunks of text large or small. Beyond word wrapping, though, it's bereft of many basic and useful features. There are easily a dozen decent freeware applications vying to replace it. Here are three of them: NoteTab Light, Notepad ++, AkelPad.

NoteTab Light is my favorite. It's got features like baseball players have steroids. Under the Help menu, users can choose to replace Notepad with NoteTabLight, so that Notepad's icons open NoteTab instead. The interface is busy, even hectic, but not chaotically so. Navigating is easy once users learn to deal with the various tabs that come preinstalled. There are top-level tabs, like those on most Web browsers. The tabs let users manage several different projects at once.

NoteTab Light comes with prewritten code that can be inserted.

(Credit: CNET Networks, Inc.)

The left column displays a list of commands, called Clips, that do anything from inserting bits of text to generating code. Each library, the roster of which appears as tabs at the bottom of the screen, contains its own set of clips. The FTP library, for example, lets users create server profiles, connect, upload, and download files, and issue various commands. The HTML library auto-completes HTML tags.

The publisher's site offers many user-created libraries, or users can make their own. Users can create their own clips by pressing Ctrl-Alt-F2. The ClipBook library lives as a series of tabs at the bottom of the program window.

Even with all this musculature, NoteTab Light loads fast. It's not a tool for casual users, but power users and programmers should find plenty to love.

Notepad ++ has some built-in features designed to appeal to coders. It's probably the better choice for the casual user who wants a cross between Notepad and WordPad. Notepad ++ has some noticeable differences from WordPad. Support for tabs is key. Tabs let users manage different documents simultaneously. Line-numbering is key, too, a feature that nobody mucking about in C should be without.

Notepad ++ has coding options as well, but they live in the menubar.

(Credit: CNET Networks, Inc.)

The interface is much simpler compared with NoteTab Light. A familiar row of icons with their mouse-over labels sits at the top, and one row of tabs are just below that. The rest of the screen is made of nothing but pure white space. All the coding tools live in the menubar, with some represented on the toolbar. Users can compile and run macros, convert text to Hex, submit directly to W3C for validation, launch in Firefox and IE, spell-check, and more.

Choosing between Notepad ++ and NoteTab Light probably will depend as much on layout as anything else. Although, forgive the pun, notably Notepad ++ can not auto-replace Notepad the way that NoteTab Light can.

AkelPad can auto-replace Notepad, but installing it is a gigantic pain. Although it's written by a Russian-speaking programmer, the installation is in English. There's also an option to make sure the menus are in English when the program loads. If users get the Russian-language menubars, there is an easy solution.

AkelPad is extremely lightweight, and features plug-ins that only load the features needed.

(Credit: CNET Networks, Inc.)

Mouse over to the third menu, and scroll down to the last option. When mousing over the last option, a list of languages should appear. Choose English--or whichever menu language is preferred--and the menu should change to the desired language.

AkelPad is definitely the lightest of the four programs. Its installer weighs in about 175 KB, and it eats about 3 MB of RAM while running all of its extensions. The plug-ins range from allowing auto-scroll, to making the toolbar appear permanently. Users can set what kinds of files AkelPad can open, or print, or edit. Tabs are supported, and the text margin is customizable. Plug-ins must be added to the AkelPad plug-in folder, and then they need to be activated individually from within the program. The program has potential, but this work flow lacks the simple mechanics of NoteTab Light and Notepad ++.

Do you have a favorite Notepad replacement that I haven't mentioned? Let us know about it in the comments. We might add it to our next Notepad roundup.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (15 Comments)
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by JoyceNgo-218335993631273378369 February 6, 2008 5:43 PM PST
I like NotePad++ :)
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by ronnopiano February 6, 2008 8:00 PM PST
Edit Pad Lite
http://www.editpadpro.com/editpadlite.html
Reply to this comment
by CheeseKing February 7, 2008 1:44 AM PST
ATnotes
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by mishu.1985 February 7, 2008 1:48 AM PST
wel they al seem like wordpad subs to me, they all eat more RAM than notepad does..
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by mishu.1985 February 7, 2008 1:50 AM PST
as for notepad++ being unable to auto replace notepad, anyone who is crazy enuf to want a replacement wud b crazy enuf to kno how to substitute it as wel.
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by weblizzer February 7, 2008 7:20 AM PST
I like most the Notepad++ other is the TextPad is one way better too... Anyway this is helpful for most web developers who are masters in coding pure dynamic scripts.


Philippines Freelance Web
http://www.philfreelance-web.com
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by justdaven February 7, 2008 9:34 AM PST
I like TeraText. It does not have the Tabbed interface that these so, but it has syntax highlighting, predefined for many languages, like Java, SQL, and others, plus you can change and define your own syntax highlighting, print in color with the highlights, and have line numbering, etc.
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by rif42 February 7, 2008 9:59 AM PST
NoteTab is good but PSPad is better. PSPad 4.5.3 has an amazing feature set. Can be used for general text editing but is geared towards editor for programmer.
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by kryzchek February 8, 2008 9:15 AM PST
I'm a big fan of UltraEdit, and I've been using it for years.

http://www.ultraedit.com
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by WordsmithONE February 8, 2008 12:25 PM PST
Dark Room is more useful for writers than for coders, but it's still a useful and slick Notepad replacement for creative applications.
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by News4Me2 February 8, 2008 7:33 PM PST
You may want to give ConText a look if you are using any version of Windows..

http://www.context.cx/

I've used this freeware tool for years because it has great features, along with highlighters for a large number of scripting and coding languages, as well as hardware routers and such.
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by atgheb February 9, 2008 3:08 AM PST
I can't believe no one has mentioned TextPad.
Let me be the first. Easily the best NotePad replacement.
It also has a customizable interface, a plugin architecture that allows you to configure it to run batch commands or execute programs. It comes pre-installed with Java edit, compile and execute ability, it can read and save in PC, or *nix formats...
You can even configure it with a spell checker which is something I wish notepad had. If you are a developer, you can probably easily configure it as an editor for your poison of choice
http://www.textpad.com/
Experience it.
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by ChumbaWumpah March 10, 2008 4:44 AM PDT
drug spammer
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by dosware March 18, 2008 4:30 AM PDT
Akelpad is the only Notepad-class editor discussed here- it remains small, lean, and fast. IMO it has now displaced the legendary Metapad as the premiere Notepad-class editor:

Like Notepad and Metapad, Akelpad start-up is super fast even on legacy machines. Unlike the former, it can handle huge files with ease- loading times and search/replace times are significantly shorter than all of the freeware editors mentioned.
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by chad.armstrong August 5, 2008 2:39 PM PDT
Textmate for Mac is pretty cool too, has plugins for different development environments for macros and stuff. Pretty cool.
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