However, nothing about either the program or its documentation was unclear or confusing, and we recommend Q-Dir without reservation. There's a Help file if you need it, though its English language version seems to have been the product (or victim) of machine translation, with the occasional smile-provoking phrase.
The 64-bit edition Q-Dir is one of the most flexible Windows file managers we've tried, with too many options to describe. Q-Dir has some useful extras, too, such as a Magnifier tool, and many options relating to how it opens, runs, looks, and performs. Best of all, the clearly separated yet unified view ended the tedious business of resizing and dragging around various open windows or, worse, trying to use the navigation arrows to move between two or more directories. Each separate window offers a complete Explorer-style interface, so browsing to various folders and files had a familiar feel. Once we'd chosen our view, we could set it as the program's default. With four drives on two physical hard disks in our system, Q-Dir's 4-Dir view was perfect for a one-look overview.
At the end of the program's main menu bar is a series of icons for toggling between its 12 different display configurations, such as 3-Dir (three windows), 2-Dir, horizontal, vertical, and so on, with an optional left-hand navigation panel and system tree view. Q-Dir's default view is the four-pane 4-Dir Quadro-View window, which duplicates all window features and the same basic tree view in each pane. No and is a very popular File Manager in the File Management category. You dont have to renounce the usual, Drag and Drop, all Views, and other functions of your system. Fast and easy access, with an amazing Quadro-View (4 panes) technique. It also simplifies dragging and dropping and other file maintenance. Q-Dir is described as makes your files and folder easy to manage. This setup lets you view multiple disks or directories simultaneously in one interface, ending desktop clutter and window-juggling.
Q-Dir also offers optional context-menu integration and portable operation, but what really sets it apart from other file management tools is its highly flexible interface with "amazing Quadro-View technology." That sounds like something you'd find at the 1951 Motorama, not a 2011 file management utility, but it's actually a useful four-screen interface with variations. Like other file management utilities, it displays your disk drives, files, folders, and other system information, making it easy to delete, copy, export, rename, and move files and folders. I think Q-Dir needs better multi threading functionality.Q-Dir (64-bit) from Nenad Hrg is a freeware file manager with some interesting twists. When unzipping, moving or deleting large files, the program is completely unresponsive until the operation finishes. Large file operations completely lock the program. When files are deleted or moved, the window is not updated. This has been improved over the months, the delay used to be terrible, now it's not terrible, just bad.ĥ. In a few seconds the box will then appear checked. You check the box, and it appears not to be checked. Selecting the check boxes in the file window lags. A "back", "forward", and "up 1 level" button among others are very important even without an address bar.Ĥ. It is also possible to integrate with coc.nvim. GitHub - yuki-yano/fzf-preview.vim: The plugin that powerfully integrates fzf and (Neo)vim. However, when you pin it to the Task Bar, it starts in a tiny miniature window, not saving the window position and size settings.ģ.When you choose to not show the address bar, the tool bar icons also disappear. The plugin that powerfully integrates fzf and (Neo)vim. You can click the icon on the desktop and it works fine. The "Save Current State at Desktop" is wonderful, but has a Win 7 quirk. Come on man, make the icons 4x bigger, or at least an option for large icons.Ģ. I think Nenad has exceptional vision, and believes everyone else does. I'm not kidding you, those icons are only about 2mm on some displays. The tool bar icons are ridiculously small. 6 annoying problems I can think of right now.ġ.