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Mucommander vs trolcommander4/29/2023 ![]() ![]() New actions in file table: NavigateLeft/NavigateRight (The first press of the left arrow key - go to the top of the table.Added shortcut key to display the file popup menu with default key being the Context Menu key (or Alt Down in MacOS X).Alt Enter hotkey in text editor now can open file under cursor.Implemented new file Preview mode (Ctrl 4).High-resolution icons for Retina displays. Right arrow key - goto directory if selected directory, else goto end of list) The second press - go to the parent directory. Make dir: try as root on MacOS X if permission denied.Added 'created' and 'last accessed' dates in file properties window.Improved ADB location detection on MacOS X.Added NewTab command to toolbar and main menu.Fixed memory leak issue in FileSearch, Viewer and Editorįor me the new icons are too flat and too glary.įor some unknown reason trolcommander.exe is not included in the portable package ( trolcommander-0_9_), it can be extracted from the installer package ( your request hasn't been implemented yet- trolCommander version 0.9.9 cannot pack to 7-Zip.Stumbled upon an issue with installing muCommander on Mac.The native installer did not work, saying that the launcher is corrupted, but the portable version worked just fine via the command line: To move the focus between two panels the tab key is used. Files can be selected with the arrow keys which move the cursor through them. The most common commands are displayed in the bottom (move, copy, paste, delete, edit, view, make directory). ![]() Launching a GUI app from the command line is not convenient at all. Midnight commander is easy and intuitive to use. It is a lightweight, cross-platform file manager with a dual-pane interface with tabbed navigation and rich. One option is to assemble the *.app package using Launch4j. trolCommander - fork of the free and opensource muCommander filemanager. However, I didn't have enough patience to do apply the tool. So I tried looking for an alternative solution. So I found this guide: Packaging a Java App for Distribution on a Mac. And the instructions worked just fine! Here's what I did:ġ. Downloaded the appbundler utility from Ģ. muCommander is a lightweight, open-source, cross-platform file manager that runs on operating systems supporting Java. This is all cool and works, but the process is a bit clumsy. One has to download some strange utility and use a legacy build tool to assemble the final artifact. muCommander: lightweight and cross-platform file manager. Outfile mu.app \ -srcfiles mucommander.jar -appclass -name "muCommander" \ -title "muCommander" $JAVA_HOME/bin/javapackager -deploy -native -outdir.Īpparently, there's a javapackager utility included in JDK distribution that you can use to create native packages.īy running the following command in the same folder where mucommander.jar is located, it created the desired artefacts: We should do better! So I found another documentation page: Java Platform, Standard Edition Deployment Guide: Self-Contained Application Packaging. It helps you manage files on your Mac and supports two panels side by side for quick file transfers. ![]()
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