WordPad was introduced in Windows 95, replacing
Microsoft Write, included with all previous versions of Windows (version 3.11 and earlier). The source code to WordPad was also distributed by Microsoft as a
Microsoft Foundation Class Library sample application with MFC 3.2 and later, shortly before the release of Windows 95. It is still available for download from the
MSDN website. The default font used in Windows 95 to Windows Vista was 10
pt Arial; in Windows 7 it was changed to 11pt Calibri. WordPad for
Windows 2000/
XP added full Unicode support, enabling WordPad to support multiple languages, but
big endian UTF-16/UCS-2 is not supported. It can open
Microsoft Word (versions 6.0–2003) files, although it opens newer versions of the .doc format with incorrect formatting. Also, unlike previous WordPad versions, it cannot save files in the
.doc format (only
.txt and
.rtf). Files saved as Unicode text are encoded as UTF-16 LE. As a security measure Windows XP Service Pack 2 and later versions of Windows and its service packs reduced support for opening
.WRI.
Windows 10 and later versions support voice typing.
Windows XP Tablet PC Edition SP2 and
Windows Vista include
speech recognition, allowing dictation into WordPad. These and later Windows versions implement the RichEdit control, allowing WordPad to support extensible third-party services built using the
Text Services Framework (TSF), such as grammar and spellcheck. In Windows Vista support for reading Microsoft Word
DOC files was removed because of the incorrect rendering and formatting problems, and because a Microsoft security bulletin reported a security vulnerability in opening Word files in WordPad. For viewing older (Word 97–2003), and
Office Open XML, documents, Microsoft recommends free-of-charge
Microsoft Word Viewer. Native Office Open XML and
ODF 1.1 support was implemented in the
Windows 7 version of WordPad. In Windows 7 the program's user interface was updated to use a
ribbon, similar to those in
Microsoft Office. In January 2020, a
Windows Insider build of
Windows 10 tested an advertisement steering WordPad users to
Office web apps.
Discontinuation In September 2023, Microsoft announced that WordPad will be removed from "a future release of Windows", recommending
Windows Notepad and Microsoft Word. In January 2024, WordPad was no longer auto-installed after a
clean installation of the OS with the release of the
Windows 11 Build 26020 Insider Preview's Canary Channel. Furthermore, Microsoft stated that WordPad will be officially removed in future updates, and it will not be available for reinstallation. Microsoft recommended using Microsoft Word for rich text documents like
.doc and
.rtf, while Notepad is suggested for plain text documents like
.txt. ==See also==