Selecting files with the mouse and keyboard
Selecting files with the mouse or keyboard, in all view modes except Power mode, works similarly to
Explorer:
Using the mouse,
- Left-clicking a single file will select that file and deselect all others.
- Control + left-clicking a single file will toggle the
selection state of that file, leaving all others unchanged (i.e.
Control+click to select, repeat to deselect).
- Shift + left-clicking lets you select a range of files.
Click normally to select the first file in the range, then hold the
Shift key and click again on the last file in the range. All
files between and including those two will be selected.
- You can combine Control and Shift to add
a range to already selected files - without the Control key
held down, the first click in a range selection normally deselects all but the
file you clicked on.
- Clicking on an empty part of the file display (i.e. not on a file) will
deselect all files.
- Click on an empty part of the file display and (with the button still
down) move to mouse to drag out a selection rectangle. All files you drag that
rectangle over will be selected.
- If you hold the Control key down when you click to drag
the selection rectangle, existing selections will be left unchanged.
Additionally, files that you drag over will have their selection states
inverted.
- You can middle-click on a file to toggle its selection state (equivalent
to Control + left-clicking). You can also use the middle
button to drag a selection rectangle that inverts the selections of files you
drag over (equivalent to Control + left-drag). Note that some
mouse drivers map the middle mouse button to another function by default - if
you find middle-click isn't working as expected, see the FAQ for some hints on how to fix it. You can also configure
Opus to treat a single middle-click as a double middle-click, which lets you
obtain behavior similar to a web browser (e.g. single middle-click to open a
folder in a new tab). See the File Displays / Mouse Preferences
page for details on that.
- You can also use the right button to drag a selection rectangle; once the
button is released, the context menu will be shown for all selected items.
Using the keyboard,
- Ctrl+A is the default hotkey to select all items in the
list (the same as selecting the Select All command from the
Edit menu).
- Ctrl+I will invert the selection state of all items in
the list (the same as the Edit / Invert Selection command).
- The cursor keys (up/down/left/right, plus Page Up/Down and Home/End) can
be used to move the selection (and deselect all other items) in the file
display when it has input focus - click on it or use the Tab
key if it doesn't already have this.
- You can combine Shift with the cursor keys to perform
range selection using the keyboard - move the selection to the first file in
the range, and then hold Shift and use the cursor keys to
expand the range to the last item.
- Holding the Control key lets you move the focus rectangle
without changing the selection. You can use this to select multiple,
non-contiguous files. For example, use the cursor keys to place the selection
on a given file. Then hold the Control key down and use the
cursor keys to move the focus rectangle to another file - note that the first
file is not deselected.
- Pressing the Space bar when an item has input focus will
select it. You can toggle the selection on the currently focused item by
pressing Control+Space.
- Pressing the Insert key toggles the selection of the
current item, and automatically moves the input focus to the next item in the
list.
- Typing a partial filename will activate the find-as-you-type field and place the
selection on the first file matching the entered string.
In power mode, mouse and keyboard selection works slightly differently by
default (although the behaviour of the mouse can be modified quite a lot from
the File Display
Modes / Power Mode Preferences page).
Using the mouse,
- Left-clicking a single file will invert the selection state of that file,
but will not disturb the selection state of any other items.
- You can select a range of files by simply clicking and dragging up or down
(i.e. keep the mouse button down and move the mouse cursor up or down). If the
file you click on first is already selected, dragging up or down will deselect
all files dragged over.
- Clicking an empty part of the file display does not, by default, deselect
any files. You can drag a selection rectangle by clicking on an empty part of
the file display and dragging with the button held down - the selection
rectangle will invert the selection state of any items you drag over.
- Note that because dragging up or down is used to select files, a drag and
drop operation can only be initiated by dragging left or right.
Using the keyboard,
- Power mode is primarily a mouse-based interface, and by default Power mode
file displays are not in "keyboard mode" - so pressing the cursor keys will
simply scroll the list (if it can scroll) and will not select any files.
- Pressing the Control key toggles the file display in and
out of keyboard mode. When in keyboard mode, a focus indicator is shown and
the cursor keys will move the focus indicator from one file to the next
(although they will not, by themselves, cause any files to be selected).
- Pressing the Space bar when in keyboard mode will invert
the selection state of the file that currently displays the focus indicator.
- When in keyboard mode you can select a range of files by holding the
Shift key and using the cursor keys to move the focus
indicator. The state of the first file when the Shift key was
pushed determines the selection state applied - if the first file was not
already selected, all files in the range will be selected, and vice versa.
- When range-selecting with the Shift key, reversing
direction will undo the selection you just applied. For example, if you press
Shift+Cursor Down four times to select the first four files,
and then (while still holding Shift), press Cursor Up
twice, the last two selected files will be deselected.
- Ctrl+A and Ctrl+I work the same as with
the other view modes (see above), as does the find-as-you-type field.
The default behaviour of power mode is for file selections to be persistent
(that is, files do not deselect by themselves - you have to deselect them
manually). In other file display modes you can simply click on an empty area to
deselect all files, but in power mode:
- You can either press Ctrl+A followed by
Ctrl+I (select all, followed by invert selection) to deselect
all files, or
- Use the Customize
dialog to add the Select None command to your toolbars
(e.g. in the Edit menu). This is not included in the default
toolbar set, but you may want to add it manually and assign a hotkey to it if
you are going to be using power mode.