The concept of TextEdit is its simplicity ... How to bypass it making me think about whether I want to open a new doc or an old one?

As soon as I start thinking about that, I have lost the thought I was trying to jot down in the first place. I want the old "open lots of textedit docs" and have them save as "Untitled 1, 2, 3 ..." by default if I move on to other things ... I'm opening a new thread for this, because the previous answer was not a hack at all, but just a link to Apple's "Here is how to use the new TextEdit and get used to it", which was clearly not not a satisfactory answer (since lots of people had the same question ...)

MacBook Air 13″, macOS 10.15

Posted on Feb 3, 2021 12:00 PM

Reply
6 replies

Feb 4, 2021 11:28 AM in response to dialabrain

Thank you so much @dialabrain!!! That solved my question ... Of course, it hadn't occurred to me that this might be due to the default "save to iCloud" component on my husband's computer... (On my own laptop, now sadly R.I.P., I had TextEdit in Dock and all my preferences set up "just so" ...) I'll also check out Notes, @Yer_Man, although it's always seemed too HIGH friction for me, HAHAHA, (great word, btw ...) Thanks all.

Feb 3, 2021 11:14 PM in response to QuickTimeKirk

I'm sorry QTKirk, I'm not sure what you mean ... What I have usually done (in the past) is go to the top-right corner and start typing "Te..." in the Search feature there (Is it called 'Spotlight'?) As soon as there are enough letters to open "TextEdit" (and not some other random thing beginning with 'T'), I (typically used to) hit 'Enter' and a new TextEdit Window would appear, ready to write in.


What happens now — for me anyway, and I surmise for others too, since I am reactivating an inconclusive thread where other people had the same question — is that instead of that new window, TextEdit "opens", but its 1st question(s) to the user are of an organisational nature, and not why they may have quickly opened TextEdit, say (and not Word or email or Pages, to name just a few ...), in the first place:


"What kind of document do you want (new or old)? Where do you want to save it? ["Egad! I can see my whole folder architecture there ... No thanks: I just want to work with no distractions right now .."]"


Thanks if you have any thoughts on how to circumvent this new 'feature'.

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

The concept of TextEdit is its simplicity ... How to bypass it making me think about whether I want to open a new doc or an old one?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.