mood Posted April 19, 2021 Share Posted April 19, 2021 Set a view as the default one for all folders in Explorer using WinSetView I switch to a different folder view in Explorer, depending on the directory's contents. But my favorite one is the Details view, because it is the one which gives me the most important data about the files. You may have used Explorer's options, to set a specific view as the default one for all folders of the type. The last part is what's important, it doesn't say "All Folders", meaning the setting does not apply to every directory. Windows has quite a few system folders or user folders, such as Downloads, Music, Videos, Documents, etc. Go on and try it, switch to these directories, and you will see that each of those has a different view. So, you will have to set the view type manually for these folders. Want to set the same view for all the directories in one go? WinSetView does that. The program is open source, and portable. To download it, head to the project's GitHub page, and click on the Code button (Green colored). Select "Download Zip", and it will fetch you a 25KB archive. Extract it to a folder, and run the file that is labeled WinSetView.hta. The program's interface should open, we'll get to it in a second. You may have noticed that WinSetView's icon looks like the PowerShell icon, that's because the tool is a script. The HTA file is just a GUI (front-end) for the PS1 script. The line of options at the top, lets you choose the view type. You can pick any of the following: Details, List, Tiles, Content, Small Icons, Medium Icons, Large Icons. Do you want to see the file extensions? (e.g. TXT, JPG, GIF, etc). If you find those useful, leave the 2nd option's box checked. I don't know about you, but I dislike the way Windows groups items in the Downloads folder, it sorts them by date. The whole thing looks messy, if you agree and want to get rid of the view, click the "No Grouping" option in WinSetView. The "Make All Folders Generic" setting applies to the example I told you at the start of the article, it forces the same view across the system folders (Downloads, Pictures, Music, etc). If you don't want that to happen, e.g. if you use a specific view for your Music library with tags, I recommend disabling the option. Everyone has a preference for the way the columns appear in Explorer, some like the File Type column, some may find the Size column useful, and so on. The "Set Global Column Headings" allows you to customize the columns view. You may pick the ones that you'd like to be listed, in the order you want them to appear. The text box below the section shows you the order of the columns, to change it, uncheck all the boxes next to the names, and start marking them. They will then be listed from Left to Right on the order you picked them. If you'd rather not mess with the headings, disable the box next to the Column heading section, and the option will be skipped by the tool. WinSetView also lets you define the default width of the name and path columns, this way you don't have to resize them manually. The last two options in the utility are related to the "This PC" and "Network" folders. The settings are similar to the first ones we saw, i.e., you can modify the default view for the folders, and also toggle the Grouping behavior. Uncheck the primary option in the section to skip these changes. Hit the Submit Button when you are ready, and let WinSetView work its magic. A PowerShell window should open, and you will see the phrase "The Operation Completed Successfully", appear several times, depending on the number of changes you selected. Windows Explorer will restart (any open Explorer windows will be closed), and you will see that the View Settings that you chose have been applied to the folders. If you don't like the changes, don't fret. WinSetView takes an automatic backup when you modify things, so you can revert the settings to a previous state easily. Use the restore from backup button, select the registry key created by the tool, and the backup will be restored by the script. If you want to start over, use the Reset Views option at the top of the interface, and it will restore the settings to Windows' default views. WinSetView does not require administrator rights to run. Closing Words WinSetView is a useful little tool for Windows to quickly apply specific views to folders on the system. It is handy to make your preferred view the default, or get out of a messy "all folders have different views" or "the view that I don't want" kind of situation. Handy to keep around just for this case, especially if Windows decides to reset folder views out of the blue. Landing Page https://github.com/LesFerch/WinSetView Source: Set a view as the default one for all folders in Explorer using WinSetView Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.