![]() Just to add my own experience with left/right rename navigation, it does behave for me as describes, and I've long ago developed the muscle memory to slap right,left when I want to append text at the end of the filename before the file extension. The "F2 followed by right arrow" behavior is apparently unique to my PC, as everyone else says the cursor goes to the end of the filename, before the dot, but for me it goes after the dot. Is this something that can be tweaked?Īrdee wrote: ↑ Sun 10:01 pm3. As it stands, the by-word jumps often cause the cursor to move waaay too far in my opinion. While renaming, when you use Ctrl+Right or Ctrl+Left to move by words within the filename, certain characters - especially period (.) and underscore (_) - are not considered a break between words, but I'd argue that they should be.It would be great to have a shortcut (my preference: right-arrow) to just go to the end of the highlighted filename (i.e., excluding the extension). And hitting the End key instead of the right arrow goes to the end of the extension. You hit F2 to rename, then hit the right arrow to go to the end of the filename (without the extension) - but it goes one character "too far" and the cursor is now after the period.There is one small tweak that I'd find so useful: a change in how the arrow and other navigation keys work during a rename: You need a break once in a while.Thank you for a phenomenal tool! I am using 1.5 alpha now and it added/improved some things I'd long wished for but never requested - amazing. This screenshot tells you what to do:įinally, testing is tough. If you are upgrading to this version you might want to set them again. open a new tab by double-clicking the tab bar, or close a tab by middle-clicking its header. Tips for upgraders: Some configuration options that were previously set via checkboxes are now found among the Custom Event Actions, e.g. When you now close Configuration by OK and middle-click the status bar, you will see something like this (middle-click the status bar again to de-obfuscate): ![]() When done your event definition should look like this (the green dot tells you that "Run script" is selected AND a script is defined): For example, let’s obfuscate the filenames when middle-clicking the status bar. To run a script on a particular event set the action to "Run script" and click into the script cell of the event to create or edit the script. Select what you want to happen when double-clicking the empty part of the tab bar. The handling is as easy as can be: To select the action that you want to happen you click into the action cell right of the event and a popup up menu shows you what’s on offer: This your Custom Event Actions (CEA) cockpit within the Configuration dialog ( F9), you are the pilot now: And if you don’t you now have a good reason to learn it. ![]() You know a bit about scripting, Custom Event Actions can be a real gameĬhanger. "Open in new background tab" or "Go up", but it can also be much more. For example, you now can freelyĭecide what should happen when a folder is middle-clicked, or when the A major new feature that provides you with an easy
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