Textedit Plain Text

New Mac users may not know about TextEdit, a simple but deep text editing and word processing tool that comes with your Mac. You can use TextEdit to create documents in cases when a full word processor like Pages or Microsoft Word isn't necessary. TextEdit has two modes: plain text and rich text. You can use the first for writing, notes and coding. You can use the second for word processing. TextEdit also allows you to open Microsoft Word documents which is useful if you are sent one but haven't bought Word.

What Is Plain Text

Pressing shift + command + T will toggle the document to plain text mode. You can also set the default format in the preference pane for the app. In the TextEdit app on your Mac, choose File New, then choose Format Make Plain Text. Enter the HTML code. Choose File Save, type a name followed by the extension.html (for example, enter index.html), then click Save. When prompted about the extension to use, click “Use.html.”. A file with.TXT extension represents a text document that contains plain text in the form of lines. Paragraphs in a text document are recognized by carriage returns and are used for better arrangement of file contents. A standard text document can be opened in any text editor or word processing application on different operating systems.

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Related Subjects: Beginner's Guides (38 videos), TextEdit (22 videos)

TextEdit User Guide

Textedit

You can use TextEdit to edit or display HTML documents as you’d see them in a browser (images may not appear), or in code-editing mode.

Note: By default, curly quotes and em dashes are substituted for straight quotes and hyphens when editing HTML as formatted text. (Code-editing mode uses straight quotes and hyphens.) To learn how to change this preference, see New Document options.

Textedit Plain Text

Textedit Plain Text Download

Create an HTML file

  1. In the TextEdit app on your Mac, choose File > New, then choose Format > Make Plain Text.

  2. Enter the HTML code.

  3. Choose File > Save, type a name followed by the extension .html (for example, enter index.html), then click Save.

  4. When prompted about the extension to use, click “Use .html.”

View an HTML document

  1. In the TextEdit app on your Mac, choose File > Open, then select the document.

  2. Click Options at the bottom of the TextEdit dialog, then select “Ignore rich text commands.”

  3. Click Open.

Always open HTML files in code-editing mode

  1. In the TextEdit app on your Mac, choose TextEdit > Preferences, then click Open and Save.

  2. Select “Display HTML files as HTML code instead of formatted text.”

Change how HTML files are saved

Set preferences that affect how HTML files are saved in TextEdit.

  1. In the TextEdit app on your Mac, choose TextEdit > Preferences, then click Open and Save.

  2. Below HTML Saving Options, choose a document type, a style setting for CSS, and an encoding.

  3. Select “Preserve white space” to include code that preserves blank areas in documents.

If you open an HTML file and don’t see the code, TextEdit is displaying the file the same way a browser would (as formatted text).

Textedit Plain Text Editor

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