Notepad is a basic text editor that you can use to create simple documents.
The most common use for Notepad is to view or edit text (.txt) files, but many
users find Notepad a simple tool for creating Web pages.
Because Notepad supports only very basic formatting, you cannot accidentally
save special formatting in documents that need to remain pure text.
This is especially useful when creating HTML documents for a Web page because
special characters or other formatting may not appear in your published Web
page or may even cause errors.
You can save your Notepad files as Unicode, ANSI, big-endian
Unicode, or UTF-8.
These formats provide you greater flexibility when working with
documents that use different character sets.
Notepad allows you to create and open documents in several different formats:
ANSI, Unicode, or big-endian Unicode.
These formats allow you to work with documents that use different character sets.
By default, your documents will be saved as standard ANSI text.
Unicode is a superset of all the major scripts of the world.
It includes character sets common to business and computer use.
When you save a document in Unicode, you can use Unicode control characters to help
with text flow and direction for languages such as Arabic and Hebrew.
The bytes (a unit of storage) in a word in a Unicode document created on a
big-endian processor, such as the Macintosh, are arranged in an order opposite
to that of the bytes in a word in a document created on an Intel processor.
The most significant byte has the lowest address, with the word stored big end
first.
To make your documents accessible to users on these types of computers,
save your Notepad file in the big-endian Unicode format.
UTF stands for Universal Character Set Transformation Format.
UTF-8 is the 8-bit form of Unicode.
Save your document in UTF-8 if you are using older transmission media that
support only 8 bits of significant data within individual bytes.