

Why is there no Total Commander for Linux Because of problems with porting of Total Commander to Linux, the Linux version had to be delayed indefinitely and then eventually cancelled. The main idea of the program is to work with the file system. Recommended Commander-style file managers for Linux are the Krusader for X-Window environment and the mc (Midnight Commander) for console mode. Despite the efforts of many Linux developers I didnt find any good replacement for my favorite file manager - Total Commander. yml file for reference on building the project.The name was changed in 2002 after Microsoft pointed out that the word "Windows" was their trademark. Or you can build from command line with qmake -r followed by make -j. Mac OS X: You can use either Qt Creator (simply open the project in it) or Xcode (run qmake -r -spec macx-xcode and open the Xcode project that has been generated).Linux: cd to directory with project, run qmake -r to generate Makefile and build via make -j.I have not tried building with MinGW, but it should work as long as you enable C++20 support. Run qmake -tp vc -r to generate the solution for Visual Studio. Visual Studio 2022 or newer is required - v143 toolset or newer. Windows: you can build using either Qt Creator or Visual Studio for IDE.Qt 5.12 or newer required (currently tested with 5.15.2 and 6.2.2).A compiler with C++20 support is required.Subsequently, you can use the same update_repository script at any time to pull incoming changes to the main repo, as well as to all the subrepos, thus updating everything to the latest revision. sh for Linux / Mac) after cloning file-commander to clone the nested repositories. The main git repository has submodules, so you need to execute the update_repository script (available as. Reporting an issueĬreate an issue on the project's page on Github. Known Issuesįor the list of known issues, refer to the project issues on Github, sort by the "bug" label. Windows Vista and later systems are supported (x32 and 圆4). The goal of the project is to provide consistent user experience across all the major desktop systems. Cross-platform Total Commander-like orthodox (dual-panel) file manager for Windows, Mac, Linux and FreeBSD with support for plugins.
