![]() ![]() ![]() Column view enables fast navigation and provides a full picture of a directory tree, which is one of the two reasons I use Finder (i.e., a file manager), the other being Quick Look. Easier to copy/cut and paste? What a joke - how often do you do that to justify having two panes in your face at all times? Might as well spend the time to do a column view. What's the advantage of being dual-pane? I can't fathom. Here's a very brief (batch) review.ĭisk Order, Commander One, DCommander, and CRAX Commander: No column view. I tried everything listed in the TotalFinder alternatives post on TotalFinder forums. So I went out to look for full Finder replacements. Anyway, even after running TotalFinder, it's still that damn old stupid Finder, the columns of which I have to manually resize all the time just a little bit nicer. ![]() XtraFinder has additional problems like folder-on-top not working, window config occasionally forgotten, and the long-standing issue of shitty Chrome-style tab implementation (basically stacking a separate layer on top of each window) that shows a visible white divider, so I'm running TotalFinder right now, not sure about whether it would be abandoned completely next year. Just like QLEnableTextSelection in, I guess. Seems that a hole they are both utilizing has been closed. The unexpected part is that even after disabling the Debugging Restrictions part of SIP ( csrutil enable -without debug), XtraFinder and TotalFinder 1 both can't auto resize columns. Long live TotalFinder!Īs expected, it's hard to get Finder to work the way I want it to on El Capitan. And holy cow, it fixed automatic column resizing! The fix isn't perfect - there's actually a visible delay before resizing, but I'm happy again. Just as I was finishing this post, an update to TotalFinder came. Update (updated even before I published the article). ![]()
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