![]() SquareRoot.sln UTF-8 Unicode (with BOM) text, with CRLF line terminators Speed.txt ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators Precision.txt ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators Main.cpp ASCII C program text, with CRLF line terminators If you have git installed, it's located in C:\Program Files\git\usr\bin.ĭuration.h ASCII C++ program text, with CRLF line terminators The (Linux) command-line tool 'file' is available on Windows via GnuWin32: ![]() However, (for those on Mac or Linux) here are some other contenders I found: On the web I've read that Notepad++ is still the all around large-file editor champion. I hear Windows 11 improved the performance of large 100+MB files to open much faster. Updated with screenshots of the newer Notepad and Notepad++įar more Encoding options are available in NotePad++ should you need them. More here on Notepad's " Unicode" option: Windows 7 - UTF-8 and Unicode It was a onetime export, so Notepad fit the bill for me.įYI: From my understanding I think " Unicode" (as listed in Notepad) is a misnomer for UTF-16. There are many different types of encodings, but this was all I needed when our export files were in UTF-8 and the 3rd party required ANSI. If it is UTF-8, you can change it to ANSI and click save to change the encoding (or visa-versa). Whatever the default-selected encoding is, that is what your current encoding is for the file. It will show you the encoding of the file when you click " Save As.". Open up your file using regular old vanilla Notepad that comes with Windows 7.
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