![]() ![]() The tool is portable, so no installation is required and this also means it will not create new Registry entries or affect existing ones.Īfter you launch it, you can press the Scan button and let the app analyze the files that are stored on your hard drive the tool will display results in several tabs, each offering a different way to view your files.įor example, there’s a tab displaying them as a tree view, and another showing 1000 larges files. Portable WizTree is a lightweight utility that can show you all the files stored on your hard drive, allowing you to easily manage them. New Indonesian translation added (thanks to Marcellinus Ferdinand Suciadi)ĭownload: WizTree 4.13 | Portable WizTree | ~6.Portable WizTree: View and manage all the files stored on your hard drive.WizTree will now remember if tree and file view data is being sorted by size or allocated and use the same sort order when restarted.Percent of Drive calculations (File View) were incorrect when multiple drives were selected - fixed.2 = sort by allocated size (desc), file name.1 = sort by file size (desc), file name.default sorting can now be set via command line /sortby=sortoption, where sortoption can be.Fixed possible "Access Violation" error on startup when scanning for devices such as mobile phones. ![]() ![]() Importing a CSV file would display incorrect file dates/times due to timezone adjustment error - fixed.Support for DrivePool, Storage Spaces and other similar "virtual" drives added (WizTree would crash or stop working when scanning these types of drive before).New command line parameter /filterfullpath= added to control whether filters are applied to full path or file name only.Include/Exclude Filters can now be applied to entire path (default) or file name only.Search history dropdown added to File Search and Include/Exclude filters.Regular expression searches can be used for file search and include/exclude filters.If the regex contains spaces, enclose it in double quotes, like this:.To perform a regex search, type in a forward slash followed immediately by the regex, e.g.: ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |