Gedit utf 89/5/2023 There is nothing to stop you from installing any text editor you like and setting it as the default on your install. There's little point in angling for a different default editor, or should I say that if there is, the reason would need to be a valid one not a minority use case. Mint is aimed at general users, Gedit works fine for that. LaTeX is a specialised format that most users have never heard of, and those who have picture shiny rubber like fabric at the word. I support Windows at my job and at this point I can't change everyone to a LInux system but one day I might. I try to use it for everything I do, and generally unless a piece of software is only written for Windows I will use Linux for whatever task I am doing. I am on my second Distro and I will never go back to Windows as my main OS. There are so many alternatives to software it is mind boggling. Linux is all about freedom to choose what you want. I appreciate everyone's efforts to help us out. I think if it takes 12 years to fix a problem that is not a big deal in this Linux world. Other OS's charge money for their operating system and software they create. This is the Linux world and for the most part all people here are volunteering their time and effort for free. I understand the frustration but also understand the world you are in. Still, I hope you now understand what I mean. To Vincent: thank you for the link to the alternatives. This is not a way for a moderately comfortable operating system to behave.Ī default text editor should be able to open all text files. And yesterday, instead of working on the document that I was trying to open with gedit, I spent my working time looking for a fix (there is no), and finally looking for another editor. As a normal user, I just do not have this time. I'm not the only one in the world with this issue, and I had no intention to use, say, xemacs, which requires quite a lot of time to get used to. So I really think the gedit developers got something wrong - and not I. Īnd accidentally, as I transferred my data from a Mac, I have many other text files that gedit cannot open, I just tried a couple. Most programs come without a help function, and if something does not behave as expected, then it's not bug, it's a feature. And I chose Mint because it made to me an impression that it tries to support normal users. I changed from Mac to Linux because I like the idea of open source software, and because I found the hype about Apple quite unsupportable. So I expect form a default editor in my system to behave nice to me and to open all files that can be opened by other editors. I do not go home and start looking for a right editor for opening a text file just because the default editor in my system could not do it. I have 6 hours per day for my job, after that I go to my family and cook, clean the house, talk to kids and control their homework. However, that is not how normal users work. They insists on vi being comfortable and things like that. I know people can be funny about their pet editors and other programs. If you want "normal people" (not geeks) to use your system, then you should listen to what normal users have to say about it. I was addressing them, actually, and I'm saying this again, because I want Mint to be a good OS: So if a Mac user gives me a perfectly normal text file that can be opened by any text editor apart from gedit, than gedit is just not the right tool. Of course, if somebody knows how to fix this, you are very welcome to answer, but I somehow doubt that there is another solution apart from patching gedit. I was able to open the file in LibreOffice, and XEmacs was also quite happy to open it. If you want people that are not experts to use Mint, please choose user-friendly software. Dear Mint developers, please be kind and use some other text editor as default editor in your system. So I guess there is no sense in submitting this to gedit developers again. Sorry for shouting, but that is exactly how I feel. This issue has been reported to gedit team since 2006 (just google for the error message), and the last report I found dates on July 2011, and it still remains. That's what I was used to at Mac OS, for example. However, what I really expect from a good text editor is to tolerate small corruptions in a text file and open it anyway. It seems that Mac OS uses some different UTF-8 encoding than the rest of the world. I've tried every available encoding, and nothing works. Select a character encoding from the menu and try again.Īnd then gedit plainly refuses to open the file. Please check that you are not trying to open a binary file. Gedit has not been able to detect the character encoding. When I try to open a LaTeX file that was written by a colleague on MacOS, I get the error message: I've spent about three working hours on this problem:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |