And I'm getting that we're all geeks. My mother isn't. Fine tuning the OS would be completely beyond her.
And I'm getting that we're all geeks. My mother isn't. Fine tuning the OS would be completely beyond her.
Indeed. And again, in a text editor no less. Yes Notepad is super basic but not being able to set the font there? That'd be absurd. Hell sometimes I use Notepad to leave a note for someone else at work and I'll set the font to max and write in all caps so they don't miss it
So, do you remember WordPad & NotePad? The entire point of NotePad was that it was pure ASCII, with no formatting at all, whereas WordPad was the same, but with RTF (Rich Text Formatting) that included fonts & sizes.
Yes, I do remember it. And guess what? Having a few quality of life upgrades in a basic piece of software that you don't have to use besides once to set it to your preference (maybe you prefer a different font or have a different use case) doesn't defile the sanctity of Notepad or whatever
Indeed. We should be able to tell our machine that we can't read text smaller than 12pt, & be able to rely on our OS to enforce that.
Sure fine, but even then I wouldn't expect that to affect the behavior of a text editor and to then not be able to override that without going 6 menus deep in one of 3 control panel variants. And hey, Notepad remembers your font settings so just set it once and off you go.
I have to repeat something: we're not talking about defaults here. We're specifically talking about having the option to change your font settings in a text editor. Nobody mentioned OS-wide defaults until you brought it up, and that is a very different conversation.