And View adds the Word Wrap command that used to be under Format. Edit adds a new Font item, which navigates to settings and expands the Font group. The File, Edit, and View menus are almost identical to classic Notepad, with all the same commands. Where classic Notepad has File, Edit, Format, View, and Help top-level menu items, the new Notepad has only File, Edit, and View. It offers just two options, for app theme-which can be Light, Dark, or Use system setting (the default)-and Font, which has separate drop-downs for Family, Style, and Size, plus a nice preview. When you click this button, the new settings interface appears and takes over the entire app window. The most obvious is the addition of a settings gear at the far right of the menu bar. Other changes, like the rounded corners on the app window and menus, were already applied to the previous version of the app by Windows 11.įor the most part, the interface is the same: there’s still a simple menu with no toolbar, and the status bar at the bottom retains all of the same textual displays as before. That means that the app header uses the Mica material from the Fluent Design System, the fonts are updated and larger than before, and there’s a central settings interface. That’s good: I use and rely on Notepad every single day, just as I do Paint.įirst and most obviously, Notepad has been updated to fit in better, visually, with the new Windows 11 look and feel. It’s exactly what I figured it was-a refresh of the classic Notepad desktop app-and it doesn’t appear to lose any functionality, or have any major issues, like the refreshed Paint. After a few days of waiting, I was finally able to download the redesigned Notepad for Windows 11 that Microsoft announced Tuesday.
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