If line break styles matter for your work, use the Status Bar Preferences to enable a status bar indicator to show the file's (dominant) line break style. If the Convert|To Macintosh menu item is grayed out, that means the file already uses classic Mac line breaks consistently. Use the Convert|To Macintosh command to make sure your file uses consistent classic Mac line breaks if you'll be using the file with older Mac applications. Classic Mac applications may try to display the LF in Windows text files, resulting in a weird character at the start of each line. ![]() However, other applications often only support the "proper" line breaks for their environment. EditPad even handles files that use a mixture of all three. To EditPad, it does not matter whether a file uses Windows, UNIX, or Mac line breaks. Only the line termination characters are converted. ![]() Note that OS X applications may use the LF only UNIX format rather than the classic Mac CR only format. On the Macintosh, text files use a single Carriage Return character to terminate a line. ![]() Convert|To Macintosh (CR only) Convert|To Macintosh (CR only)Ĭonverts the active file to the line break style used by the Apple Macintosh.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |