Fixed a crash when an External Tool asks for a parameter value. Dropbox VFS now uses short-lived access tokens. Stability of the WebDAV VFS was improved. Locked items can now be unlocked by file operations. A generic error dialog shown by file operations can now implicitly mark the "Apply to All" checkbox if Shift is pressed.
Added an option to choose which file operations should be enqueued and which should always start immediately.
Now the toolbar tries to resolve full paths for short names of command-line tools to show their icons. Batch Rename now supports text processing for the placeholder. Batch Rename now supports the and the placeholders for parent and grandparent directory names. The Backspace key can now be assigned to any file panel shortcut. Quick Search no longer handles the Space key by default. Brief System information now shows additional info in the CPU and the RAM boxes.
Built-in Viewer can now update its content by Cmd+R or automatically on native filesystems. Built-in Viewer now does scrolling along a predominant axis only. Items can now be sorted by Date Last Opened a.k.a. List view now has the Extension and the Date Accessed columns. If you have any questions or suggestions, please email them at or visit the forum at
Evaluation and conclusionĮverything worked smoothly in our tests, thanks to the fact that NDN didn't hang, crash or prompt error messages. It's possible to create list files, compare directories, count the directory length, set up columns, sort items by various criteria, apply advanced filters, change the drive, make smart selections, swap the two console panels, as well as save all NDN settings to an initialization file. The history with visited directories, executed command lines, edited and viewed files can be examined anytime, as well as deleted. Resort to handy file management toolsįurthermore, NDN lets you edit volume labels, unpack diskette images, use a calculator, consult a calendar or ASCII table, manage a phone book with names, passwords and memos, open spreadsheet files, manipulate the OS environment, open the Windows Explorer context menu or open files in Windows Explorer, and execute OS commands.
It's possible to view files as text, hex, dump, disassemblies, databases or spreadsheets, edit them, rename or move files, copy them to archives, extract archives, split files, create directories, delete items, modify file attributes and timestamps, encode and decode files, as well as convert file names to uppercase, lowercase, capitalization, or switch case.
Suffice it to say, users who are only familiarized with graphical interfaces are likely to have issues when trying to figure out how to work with this file manager. Similar to Norton Commander, the console interface contains dual panes and a menu bar with a wide range of options. It doesn't change Windows registry settings.
It's wrapped in a portable package whose contents can be extracted anywhere on the local drive or a removable device so that you can directly launch NDN on any PC.
It offers support for a built-in calculator, ASCII table, phone group, archive extractor, and history of viewed and edited lines, among many others. Inspired by the old Norton Commander, NDN (Necromancer's Dos Navigator) is a DOS file manager that features numerous options and configuration parameters.