These things have been discussed before, and the conclusion is, no, there is no 
reasonable definition of "big", it totally depends on your computer speed, and 
also on whether you actually want those things I listed above to happen.  Geany 
is used on Raspberry Pis and workstations with high end GPUs, "big" and "fast" 
is not comparable between those so there is no way to decide how long something 
will take.

Geany is a programming IDE, it is designed to edit reasonable sized (for 
humans) program language files, thats its primary use-case.  It is capable of 
editing other files (large logs are a common example) but they are not the core 
focus, so the defaults are set for the core use-case and options to turn off 
encoding and filetypes are available for other cases if those features are not 
required.

Having Geany try to be "smart" in the way that you suggested will only result 
in it being more annoying to some part of the primary use-case population, and 
thats a negative.

-- 
You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
https://github.com/geany/geany/issues/1969#issuecomment-427201967

Reply via email to