Add to usercmd.ini :
[Shortcuts] C+Shift+G=em_OpenDOSHere Because Total Commander runs with user-level privileges, you can even map the Windows key (e.g., LWin+E ) to open Total Commander instead of File Explorer. This is the ultimate "exclusive takeover" for file management.
These bindings are hardcoded into the wincmd.ini file. However, the real power of "wincmdkey exclusive" comes from the ability to redefine them. Creating Your Own Exclusive Key Set (The wincmd.ini Hack) Out of the box, Total Commander respects your default keyboard layout. But "exclusive" truly shines when you map internal commands that no other program uses. Step 1: Locate your wincmd.ini Navigate to Configuration > Change Settings Files Directly . This opens wincmd.ini in Notepad. Step 2: Understand the [Shortcuts] Section If you have custom shortcuts, they appear under the [Shortcuts] header. If it doesn't exist, create it.
Add to usercmd.ini :
[Shortcuts] C+Shift+G=em_OpenDOSHere Because Total Commander runs with user-level privileges, you can even map the Windows key (e.g., LWin+E ) to open Total Commander instead of File Explorer. This is the ultimate "exclusive takeover" for file management.
These bindings are hardcoded into the wincmd.ini file. However, the real power of "wincmdkey exclusive" comes from the ability to redefine them. Creating Your Own Exclusive Key Set (The wincmd.ini Hack) Out of the box, Total Commander respects your default keyboard layout. But "exclusive" truly shines when you map internal commands that no other program uses. Step 1: Locate your wincmd.ini Navigate to Configuration > Change Settings Files Directly . This opens wincmd.ini in Notepad. Step 2: Understand the [Shortcuts] Section If you have custom shortcuts, they appear under the [Shortcuts] header. If it doesn't exist, create it.