This fast tip demonstrates how to
use column mode (block mode in TextPad) to replace columns using Notepad + +, UltraEdit and TextPad.
If you want to read ebooks, there are some extra features not available on Kindle ereaders, like the ability to use multicolored highlights, wordrunner, text - to - speech (with multiple voices to choose from), immersion reading where it highlights text while playing the audiobook, and the HD 10 adds two
column mode for landscape view, which is quite nice.
Next up we have Columns II which basically gives you the
flash columns mode from the original Columns to mess around with, except with one major difference; you know have to connect four matching jewels together to clear them.
This fast tip demonstrates how to
use column mode (block mode in TextPad) to insert a column using Notepad + +, UltraEdit and TextPad.
Among the changes is the addition of two
column mode, a needed option on a wide computer screen.
Two
Column mode: You can now choose to read with one column, two columns or with the number of columns determined automatically based on the font size selected and the page width.
Amazon Kindle for PC has just been updated to version 1.23 and it brings a slew of new features, including two
Column mode, split screen mode and formula mode for math equations.
Make sure you don't have reflow on when using 2
column mode.
I also really wish that the reading app had a two
column mode.
The only real negative I can find with the various zooming options is that there isn't
a column mode like with PocketBook's ereaders and the Sony Readers, which both will go from the bottom left corner of a page to the upper right for the next column, whereas the Icarus Excel just continues to page down, requiring one to manually use the stylus or the nav controller to pan to the top right for the next column.