I am now using Notepad++ as seems to be often suggested here for basic html & css editing. Only thing missing is a method to HTML Encode pasted in text. Is there a way to do this in Notepad++ or do I need to look for a different editor which dos this? If so any suggestions, I have used Komposer in the past which was ok, is there anything better out there now.

Save an html file to any place on your computer. Then go into Windows Explorer, right-click and press "properties" and then then where it says "Opens with: Firefox" press the "Change" button and select Notepad++.


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With both editors, you can create clean HTML output with the easiest WYSIWYG editing possible. If you've already started writing rich-text content, all you have to do is paste it in onlinehtmleditor.dev, make your adjustments, extract HTML output from view-source mode and reuse it anywhere on the web!

Is it possible to edit html files in firefox with notepad? was asked 8 years ago, but the solutions no longer work. The internal Scratchpad facility seems to have disappeared, I cannot see how to edit the code using Developer Tools, and Windows 11 no longer offers Notepad as an "Open with" app.

Notepad++ is a free, open-source text and source code editor. Written in the C++ programming language, Notepad++ prides itself in paring down on unnecessary features and streamlining processes to create a light and efficient text notepad program. In practical terms, this means high speed and an accessible, user-friendly interface.

Current versions of Notepad/Notepad++ (Windows) are supposed to be good for HTML. You may need to ensure that the program is saving in the correct format when you save your pages, which for current versions of Notepad is apparently .htm or .html

You don't need to remember it. It's not rocket science. We are using the Data URI's format and telling the browser to render an html (try "javascript:alert('Bazinga');"). The content of said html is a simple html line with the html5 attribute contenteditable. This works only on modern browsers that understand this attribute. Click and type!

But, how to open an existing text/html file into this 'browser acting as a text editor' mode?


I've always wished browsers could flip back and forth between editing html source as plain text, and viewing it as formatted html.


Seems there's hope of this yet.

By opening the 'editor' Crtl-S-ed html files in Sigil, and not trying to just paste into Sigil (it uses webkit so almost responds well enough to Chrome copy/pastes), you'll get more of the original formatting images', tables' placements etc... that's where this simple in browser editor is so useful in gathering snippets and saving to disk - for those that works for :)

it uses localStorage, so it needs to be hosted, but that means it'll save your notes between visits... I have the long version of my simple html5 notepad app, which is a little beefier code-wise (there's a polyfil & css), but still butt-simple.

Lot of great use, can drag pictures into the contenteditable. Here is a texteditor with a regular expression textfilter and headless popout of the textareas value. Type !html then press enter. Could add more buttons and macros, I tried to keep the amount of chars down for mobile passwordmanager limits. For FireFox or mobiles with data: protocol scheme.

Nice, I tweaked it to: data:text/html, for a more readable sized font in monospace. I usually just use notepad++ for my random notes throughout the day and keep my workspace in VS Code, but this might be conditionally useful as well.

You can never be sure you aren't going to have a bad day by opening any type of file in any type of program. However, some programs (like editors) are much harder to attack due to their small footprint or secure design and therefore are less likely to be targeted for mass attacks (especially because an attacker is likely to assume their evil .html file is going to be opened in a browser, not in an editor).

In the above example, right-clicking on an html file in KDE Dolphin lets you choose options like "Edit In DisposableVM" and "View In DisposableVM". Clicking on either one of these will automatically instantiate a disposable virtual machine (dispvm), then send the file to the dispvm and load it in the associated app. This takes only seconds. When you're done with the editing app, the edited version will be returned to the calling VM and the dispvm will be instantly destroyed. Note, however, this process by itself does not make an untrusted file into a trusted file.

How ever if you do not have the skill to verify the HTML and JavaScript code is not malicious, you should just not open it and assume it is malicious as you can not guarantee its safety even if you opened it in notepad.

The first thing we need to do before we can begin actually learning assembly, is set up our editing environment. This can be as simple as opening notepad, but I'd like to introduce a few alternatives. There exists a list of all of most of the text editors available here. However, there are a few popular choices that tend to be more appropriate for what we wish to do.

In previous versions of Notepad++ and Crimson Editor there were more substantial differences. Crimson Editor has been the more robust IDE while Notepad++ was true to the original notepad in it's sleek and slim features. The two have become so similar that there's nothing substantial that would make me suggest one over the other. In programming forums you either a Crimson Editor or a Notepad++'er; the choice is yours! 2351a5e196

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