In case you didn't spot it in the Announcements forum, TextPad 4.7 has been released. The Release Notes can be read here:
http://www.textpad.com/support/relnotes.html
This is available as a free upgrade to all registered users of TextPad 4.x, so come and get it:
http://www.textpad.com/download/
Keith MacDonald
Helios Software Solutions
TextPad 4.7 is released
Moderators: AmigoJack, bbadmin, helios, Bob Hansen, MudGuard
TextPad 4.7 is released
Last edited by bbadmin on Fri Aug 29, 2003 8:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
Strange thing.
Upgrading at home: no problem - I can switch current line highlight on and off and can change colors for the dashed lines.
Upgrading at office: I can switch current line highlight on and off, but in
Configure-PReferences-Document Classes-Any Document Class- Colors
the entry for current line highlight is missing.
So I can use it, but only with the default color...
In both cases I had version 4.6.2 installed and I did NOT uninstall before I installed 4.7...
Upgrading at home: no problem - I can switch current line highlight on and off and can change colors for the dashed lines.
Upgrading at office: I can switch current line highlight on and off, but in
Configure-PReferences-Document Classes-Any Document Class- Colors
the entry for current line highlight is missing.
So I can use it, but only with the default color...
In both cases I had version 4.6.2 installed and I did NOT uninstall before I installed 4.7...
On Win2K/XP, a user needs to be a member of the Administrators or Power Users groups to be able to install software. This is an operating system, rather than a TextPad restriction. To obtain those privileges temporarily, right click the TextPad setup program (eg. txpeng470.exe) and choose the "Run As" command.
Keith MacDonald
Helios Software Solutions
Keith MacDonald
Helios Software Solutions
Windows 2000 or XP would be nicebbadmin wrote:On Win2K/XP, a user needs to be a member of the Administrators or Power Users groups to be able to install software. This is an operating system, rather than a TextPad restriction. To obtain those privileges temporarily, right click the TextPad setup program (eg. txpeng470.exe) and choose the "Run As" command.
We are currently restricted to cutting-edge NT4 technology!
I thought that the restriction only applied to software installs that wrote to the 'global' areas of the registry.
What I will try is logging-in to the other machines to see if I can install with my admin rights.
Cheers,
Steve
TP 4.7 Fixes Big Unicode Problem
Dear Helios,
Thank you for v4.7's improved ability to handle unicode files.
With prior TP versions, when I opened a file with unusual unicode character, TP would translate those characters into little black rectangles. This translation was not only cosmetic. It cause the loss of some of the unicode data, which made the file unintelligable to the application that originally created it, such as Word 2003. (One good thing about this situation is that TP did warn you of this problem when opening a file with unicode it couldn't handle.)
As a result, I had no choice but to start using another editor called EmEditor. While EmEditor is a very good program, it is not as feature rich or friendly as TextPad.
Recently when I tried out TP v4.7, I was thrilled to find that it does not alter the unicode characters it doesn't understand. It represents them as an assortment of ascii characters, but leaves the underlying unicode data intact.
Because of this v4.7 fix, I can once again use my favorite text editor, TextPad, for programming. This makes me happy because TextPad is a wonderful program that makes work a lot easier and more pleasant.
Thanks,
Dan
Thank you for v4.7's improved ability to handle unicode files.
With prior TP versions, when I opened a file with unusual unicode character, TP would translate those characters into little black rectangles. This translation was not only cosmetic. It cause the loss of some of the unicode data, which made the file unintelligable to the application that originally created it, such as Word 2003. (One good thing about this situation is that TP did warn you of this problem when opening a file with unicode it couldn't handle.)
As a result, I had no choice but to start using another editor called EmEditor. While EmEditor is a very good program, it is not as feature rich or friendly as TextPad.
Recently when I tried out TP v4.7, I was thrilled to find that it does not alter the unicode characters it doesn't understand. It represents them as an assortment of ascii characters, but leaves the underlying unicode data intact.
Because of this v4.7 fix, I can once again use my favorite text editor, TextPad, for programming. This makes me happy because TextPad is a wonderful program that makes work a lot easier and more pleasant.
Thanks,
Dan