![]() So my question is, because I'm afraid that it will be pretty much impossible to unlearn 26 years of using Norton File Manager and 10 years of DOS before that: is there a way, though some hidden setting or command, to force tree view to only show the drive that one selects, like it does for contents on the list panel? or better yet, to have the tree view only show the actually selected drive and nothing else? I won't go into the details of the rage I went into since I usually permanently delete stuff, let's just say the cat and the dog promptly left the room and I was ready to break something Yesterday, after working for hours to rearrange and delete stuff in a large folder, I decided to replace the untidy one on my backup drive, which is essentially a mirror of my working hard drive, and instead of deleting that one, I deleted the one I had been working on, because when I selected the backup drive, instead of seeing its tree displayed, nothing had changed and instead of deleting G:\Documents, I deleted C:\Documents So I already figured how to use the F8 command, to switch views to folder tree on the left and opened folder contents on the right for each panel, so as to be able to easily navigate folders and move files (I'm getting used to using the Alt key while dragging to move instead of copy), but something I haven't figured out yet is how to Make the Tree Actually Reflect the Drive Selected on the Button Bar, instead of showing the tree of everything you've worked with on that session including the kitchen sink with dirty dishes which, after a while, becomes mightily confusing But desperately needing to move on to a 64 bit OS, I won't be able to use it any longer and TC seems to be the best thing to replace it with It takes you to the top of the directory tree.Recently been trying Total Commander to replace my trusty Norton File Manager from back in 1994. The first iteration of the CD command you should know is CD\. ![]() How to go to the root of the drive, in CMD (CD\) This command enables you to change the current directory or, in other words, to navigate to another folder from your PC. The first command from the list is CD (Change Directory). How to change the directory in CMD (CD in Command Prompt) NOTE: The information shared in this tutorial applies to Windows 11, Windows 10, and even older Microsoft operating systems such as Windows 7.
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