Tool comparison
Hex Workshop, by BreakPoint Software, is a long-standing commercial hex editor suite for Windows. It combines byte-level editing with a data inspector, structure viewer for mapping records over binary offsets, arithmetic and bitwise operations, base converter, and a broad set of checksum and digest algorithms (CRC, checksums, hashes). File and sector comparison tools highlight differences between two binaries. In ECU work it is used to examine firmware reads, apply structured edits, run arithmetic on data blocks, and validate or recompute checksums after changes. Its bookmarking and data-structure features make it useful for documenting where maps, identifiers, and code live inside a dump. It suits reverse engineers and tuners who want structure-aware editing beyond a plain byte grid.
Notepad++ is a free, open-source source-code and text editor for Windows created by Don Ho, widely used for editing scripts, configuration files, logs, and CSV data. It is not a binary editor by default, but the popular HEX-Editor plugin adds a byte-level view so users can inspect and lightly patch binary files. In tuning workflows it is most useful for authoring and editing helper scripts, reading exported logs and reports, comparing text files with the Compare plugin, and, via the hex plugin, glancing at raw dumps. Its tabbed interface, syntax highlighting, regex search, and plugin ecosystem make it a convenient utility around a tuning toolchain, even though dedicated hex editors are better for serious firmware work.
Hex Workshop (Hex Editor / Reverse Engineering, BreakPoint Software) and Notepad++ (Hex Editor / Reverse Engineering, Don Ho (open source)) compete in the same space, so the choice comes down to coverage, workflow and price for your specific ECUs. Commercial Windows hex editor with data inspector, structures and checksums Free Windows code editor with a hex-editor plugin for binary viewing
Whichever you flash with, Softechpro Solutions auto-applies DPF/EGR/AdBlue/DTC-off modules and Stage patterns with automatic checksum correction across ~1,400 firmwares on Windows & macOS — the fast way to get the actual file edits done.
See SoftechproMore on Hex Workshop