Recommended Posts

Well, I thought I would throw my hat into the arena and start work on a new project branded with the Neowin name. I have taken some time off from NexNote and have started on NeoPad. What is it? A replacement for Notepad for those of us who always wind up with quite a few instances of it open. Below is a screen shot of what I have so far. I still need to code in the find and replace functions and get the open and save functions going. I also need to figure out how I want to go about saving settings whether in the registry or in an xml file which I am partial ton and I need to quickly add in cascading and perhaps a toolbar. Of course all this means I need to try to gain some artistic talent and get some icons drawn up.

Drag and drop support is already up and running fully and so is font settings and the overall basic functionality.

It still has a ways to go, but I thought I would start getting your imput now on it. Remember, this is going to replace Notepad, for me at least, so it needs to stay light. I will not bloat it with too many features.

(the title says mypad, I know. It has gone from mypad to penpad to neopad)

post-88-1085342674.jpg

Edited by bangbang023
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/170107-neopad-pre-alpha-version-released/
Share on other sites

Settings in the registry = bad, settings in an XML file = excellent. As for the editor, looks good; but what are you planning on bringing to the table that doesn't already exist?

I don't know what does exists and what doesn't. Just like with NexNote, I refuse to use any of the other apps out there that do something like this for the simple fact I want it to all be my ideas and not trying to catch up to someone. In the end, I will put in whatever i need to make my work more efficient.

I love how I just started to type on the wrong keyboard....

Anyway, looks good so far, and I agree with the previous comment, save all your configuration data to XML files in documents and settings\user\application data ;)

I love how I just started to type on the wrong keyboard....

Anyway, looks good so far, and I agree with the previous comment, save all your configuration data to XML files in documents and settings\user\application data ;)

Well to keep it simple first, I will just have one global file in the app directory. As time progresses, I will start with that.

I'm not shooting down any ideas, I just don't want to clutter up the work load before the basic stuff is ironed out.

jsu tto show you some prgress, here is an early version. Consider it pre-version 0.1 so don't expect too much. Opening and saving works, drag and drop to open a file works and a few other things, but settings are not saved yet and find hasn't been implemented. I would like your thoughts on it though so I can see wha teneds to be changed or whatnot.

NeoPad.zip

jsu tto show you some prgress, here is an early version. Consider it pre-version 0.1 so don't expect too much. Opening and saving works, drag and drop to open a file works and a few other things, but settings are not saved yet and find hasn't been implemented. I would like your thoughts on it though so I can see wha teneds to be changed or whatnot.

(Y) Looks good!

The startup time was a bit long though - I assume that is because of .net?

What is wrong with putting the settings in the registry?

Everything!

What happens when you uninstall the application, and it doesn't wipe out ALL of it's registry settings, like 9 out of every 10 programs? What happens when you reformat and want to retain program settings, but can't export all the keys from the registry, because you don't know where they all are? I don't need my registry getting fat and bloated from updated entries that I have to clean out because the program developer is too lazy to wipe out their own data! Likewise for not having an option to save settings to a file!

The end user should never have to suffer because of a lazy coder.

Settings stored in a nice file outside the registry are beautiful -- it means you can uninstall and wipe the program at will, back up settings at will, and best of all, not have your registry filled with anymore crap than it already is.

Everything!

What happens when you uninstall the application, and it doesn't wipe out ALL of it's registry settings, like 9 out of every 10 programs? What happens when you reformat and want to retain program settings, but can't export all the keys from the registry, because you don't know where they all are? I don't need my registry getting fat and bloated from updated entries that I have to clean out because the program developer is too lazy to wipe out their own data! Likewise for not having an option to save settings to a file!

The end user should never have to suffer because of a lazy coder.

Settings stored in a nice file outside the registry are beautiful -- it means you can uninstall and wipe the program at will, back up settings at will, and best of all, not have your registry filled with anymore crap than it already is.

Agree 100%

I format very often and I like my settings to remain in an ini/xml file within the app's directory.

lol. I wanted to do alot of work today but I suffer from a really short attention span and haven't been able ot get myself to do much. Sorry guys, but thanks for all the support. BTW, I am in now way trying to outdo other Neowin branded apps. I know some may feel like I am, but that's not my intention at all.

Wish there were .app bundles on the PC. You can store settings, theme-able resources, even extra programs all inside the application itself using an .app bundle on the Mac. Is there any thing like that which could be used for settings in this program?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • It's time to say goodbye to Edge and switch back to Firefox. There's no way to disable the ugly rounded corners that appear everywhere. Not even on the page frame. No one uses screens with rounded corners, you idiots.
    • Being on Github makes it more trustable since I can see the code at any point.
    • Gen Atlas is the next game from Shadow of the Colossus creator, this time with giant robots by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The mind behind widely well-received games like Ico, Shadow of the Colossus, and The Last Guardian, Fumito Ueda, showed up at Summer Game Fest today, and that was to reveal his latest project. Being developed by genDESIGN, Gen Atlas is incoming with what looks to be plenty of mech and robot action. Watch the reveal trailer, which makes not much sense, above. The game will have players waking up on an abandoned planet where deserted facilities and grand designs from the original creators remain. Soon, they will stumble upon a colossal robot, from which players gain access to the power to change the world. "Across an endless expanse of time, the remnants of those forgotten constructs begin to move once more," adds the studio. The gameplay snippets seen in the trailer show the player character climbing giant robots (as expected from the creator), while also controlling these titans somehow as well. This is a fully single-player open-world adventure. “The team and I are grateful to all the fans who’ve been eager to learn more about our game,” says Fumito Ueda, CEO and creative director of genDESIGN. “Their passion and enthusiasm has always motivated and inspired us. We hope to share an experience that inspires moments of quiet wonder and discovery.” Before gaining the name Gen Atlas, Ueda first announced this project back in 2024 with the codename Project Robot. Interestingly, this will be a project being funded and published by Epic Games, which should mean that a Steam release is out of the question. Gen Atlas will be releasing on Epic Games Store, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5. A release date has not been announced just yet.
    • How backwards can you have it? Yes, Linux was gaining because of Linux handhelds and the push for gaming compatibility, but that's not desktop users, it barely converts anyone who owns a SteamDeck, though it helps for those who wanted to do it, but anyways, the AI+RAM debacle helped Linux because people can't easily upgrade their PCs easily and many hate AI so they'd be incentivized to try Linux.
    • 🤦🏻‍♂️ No, expected because 10 EOL
  • Recent Achievements

    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • Week One Done
      I2D earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      269
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      78
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      61
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!