Migrating to Total Commander: A Step-by-Step Setup and Configuration Guide

How to Master Total Commander: Essential Shortcuts and Customization

Total Commander is a powerful, keyboard-focused file manager that speeds up file operations, batch tasks, and system navigation. This guide gives a concise, practical path to mastering essential shortcuts and customization so you can work faster and more efficiently.

Why Total Commander?

  • Dual-pane layout: view two folders side-by-side for fast file transfers.
  • Keyboard-driven: almost everything is reachable without a mouse.
  • Extensible: plugins, custom commands, and user menus adapt it to any workflow.

Essential Shortcuts

Memorize these to move quickly through files and tasks.

  • Alt+F1 / Alt+F2 — Change drives for left / right panel.
  • Tab — Switch focus between panels.
  • Ctrl+Tab — Cycle through open tab pages in the active panel.
  • NumPad+ / NumPad- — Expand / collapse directory tree (if configured).
  • F5 — Copy selected files to the opposite panel.
  • F6 — Move selected files to the opposite panel.
  • F8 / Delete — Delete selected files.
  • Shift+F6 — Rename/move with inline edit.
  • F2 — Edit file (opens associated editor).
  • F4 — Open file in internal editor.
  • F3 — View file in internal viewer.
  • Ctrl+Q — Quick view (toggle) in current panel.
  • Ctrl+Shift+N — Create new folder.
  • Ctrl+F — Find files.
  • Alt+F7 — Search inside files (content search).
  • Ctrl+U — Swap left/right panels.
  • Ctrl+PageUp / Ctrl+PageDown — Previous / next tab.
  • Ctrl+Enter — Show full path in command line.
  • Ctrl+Shift+Enter — Run as administrator (if configured in command line).
  • Insert / Shift+Insert / Ctrl+Insert — Select files one-by-one / unselect / select contiguous block.
  • Ctrl+A — Select all files.
  • Ctrl+S — Sort files (opens sort menu).
  • Alt+Enter — Show properties of selected file(s).

Customization to Boost Productivity

Layout & Panels

  • Enable tabs (Configuration → Options → Tabs) to keep frequently used folders open.
  • Adjust column view (Name, Ext, Size, Date/Time, Attributes) to show the fields you use.
  • Use synchronized tree to keep folder trees aligned between panels.

User-Defined Commands & Buttons

  • Open Start menu → Change User Menu (or Configure → Options → Operation → User commands) to add common batch operations.
  • Add custom buttons to the toolbar (Right-click toolbar → Customize) for tasks like launching an external editor, opening a terminal, or running scripts.

Command Line & Button Bar

  • Use the command line to run wrapped commands quickly; map complex tasks to toolbar buttons. Example button for opening a PowerShell in the active directory:
    • Command: powershell.exe
    • Parameters: -NoExit -Command “Set-Location ‘%P’”

Keyboard Shortcuts & Hotkeys

  • Change or add hotkeys via Configuration → Options → Misc → Redefine hotkeys to match muscle memory (e.g., map frequently used macros to unused F-keys).

File Operations & Multi-Rename Tool

  • Use Multi-Rename Tool (Ctrl+M) for batch renaming with patterns, counters, and search/replace.
  • Configure copy/move queue behavior (Configuration → Options → Copy/Delete) to enable background operations and set transfer buffer size.

Plugins & External Tools

  • Install plugins (Configuration → Options → Plugins). Recommended:
    • Packer plugins (e.g., 7zip) for archive handling.
    • FTP plugin for remote transfers.
    • Content plugins for custom columns (e.g., video/audio metadata).
  • Configure external compare/diff tools for quick file comparison (Configuration → Options → Diff viewer).

File Associations & Viewer

  • Configure internal viewer and editors (Configuration → Options → Edit/View) to open preferred tools with F3/F4.
  • Add content plugins to show metadata columns and preview text or images in the quick view.

Workflows & Tips

  • Use dual-pane copy/move (F5/F6) for fast transfers — select files in one panel and target destination in the other.
  • Combine multi-rename and packer plugins to batch-archive organized files.
  • Create a “favorites” tab with commonly used project folders and drives.
  • Use temporary selection (Insert) to queue files across folders and copy them in bulk.
  • Keep a portable configuration (wincmd.ini) synced across machines for consistent shortcuts and plugins.

Troubleshooting & Maintenance

  • Back up wincmd.ini and wcx/wdx/wfx plugin folders regularly.
  • If performance lags during large copies, increase buffer size or enable background copy.
  • Reset toolbar and hotkeys from Configuration if accidental remapping occurs.

Example: Quick Setup Checklist (first 10 minutes)

  1. Open Configuration → Options → General: enable tabs and set startup folder.
  2. Configure visible columns and date/size formats.
  3. Set preferred external editor and viewer.
  4. Add 2–3 toolbar buttons (Open terminal, Editor, Multi-rename).
  5. Map 3 custom hotkeys you’ll use daily (e.g., Multi-Rename → Ctrl+M).
  6. Install 7zip packer plugin and FTP plugin.
  7. Create a favorites tab for current projects.
  8. Test F5/F6 copy-move with tabbed destinations.
  9. Run a quick batch rename using Ctrl+M.
  10. Back up wincmd.ini.

Mastering Total Commander is about building muscle memory for shortcuts and tailoring the interface to your workflow. Apply the above shortcuts and customizations, and within a few sessions you’ll significantly speed

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