Ao ler os comentários, fica evidente que, se você tiver tempo para substituir o Windows Explorer por outra coisa, realmente fez sua lição de casa. Os leitores estavam bastante entusiasmados com suas alternativas favoritas do Explorer. Shawn Murdock nos mostra detalhadamente por que ele ama o XYplorer:
XYplorer – just the best; and I have used pretty much everything listed here by everyone. XYplorer is constantly being developed – almost daily. It can be configured to look like windows explorer, a dual pane norton commander clone, or a tabbed explorer; or some hybrid. It also has a build in scripting language that allows you to do anything. You can, for example, write a script, and assign it to a button, that switches between various configs of the toolbar. You can write scripts to manage files, change the explorer itself, pretty much anything.
Its also completely portable. You can also have portable file extensions (totally awesome). Example: define the extension PDF to open PDFXchange viewer off or your usb stick running XYplorer.
The mini tree is really cool. This allows you to have a smaller, cleaner, directory tree made up of only directories you use, or are interested in at that moment; no more giant structures to scroll through looking for things.
The user buttons can run apps, run scripts, open folders, almost anything and are portable aware. XYplorer has colored files by extension, custom color file tags, colored branches of the directory tree, an excellent search system, custom labels, favorite files / folders. Just so many features that make this the best explorer for anyone. It can be as complicated and techy as you want; or just as simple as you want.
As for the price, just watch Bits Du Jur. It comes up for sale every couple of months. I have seen it twice since I bought it early this year. You can get a lifetime license for 50% off. I really did not want to spend money and I really liked Qdir and Cubic but I needed more. The scripting system allows me to automate my home config and my usb config and keep them in sync. This has saved me tons of time. I highly recommend!
Shawn nos teve em todo o bando de associações de arquivos portáteis - isso soa como um recurso fantástico!
O Diretório Opus era outra escolha popular de leitores. Scott pesa com seus recursos favoritos:
Directory Opus, again and again and again. Its superb. I’m a sys admin and hate the single pane (pain) explorer view, source and destination is what I need, with multiple trees if required, and the ability to macro command anything I need. print the DIR, easy, change all the file names to caps and lower case, format the text remove the _ and., easy one mouse click, Double click the desktp, a new lister appears, Cmd line from this DIR, easy, I know its expensive for the initial outlay, but I will never dessert it. I’ve tried XYplorer and other alts over the years, I just keep going back to Opus for sheer customization and configuration. Love it to bits.
Embora ninguém tenha escrito uma longa revisão, o xplorer² recebeu uma montanha de recomendações. Marcos escreve:
xplorer2 since I can’t remember when. I don’t understand why Microsoft has not incorporated a dual pane model into Explorer. When I’m explaining to friends and family how to move files from, say, a digital camera to their computer, it’s much easier with dual panes (triple pane if you count the file tree, I suppose). For me, xplorer2 is essential.
Para mais dicas de leitores, truques e alternativas favoritas do Explorer, clique no tópico de comentários completo aqui.