
With and without FileBox eXtender buttons The two pictures below show a small part of the Windows standard Open File dialog box: These buttons appear next to the minimize, restore, and maximize buttons with which you're probably already familiar.įileBox can also forcibly resize the standard Windows file management dialog boxes so they're bigger, and thus easier to use if you've got lots of files in a folder through which you need to look. These appear on the right side of the Windows dialog box title bars. (Note that if a program uses its own "private" dialog boxes for these functions, you won't see our FileBox buttons, sorry.)įileBox adds two handy buttons to these standard dialogs. Window title bars with roll-up and push-pin buttonsįileBox further enhances Windows by adding several advanced functions to the standard Open File and Save File dialog boxes. The Always on Top and Rollup commands can be also displayed on the system menu of any window. Click that button again, and the window rolls back down. When you click it, the window is "rolled up" leaving only its title bar visible, and uncovering what was underneath it. (For example, refer to a document window in Word while typing an E-mail in another program.)Īnother FileBox enhancement is the "roll-up" button added to top level windows.

This is great when you want to keep an eye on one program, but use another.

This function prevents any window you "pin" to the desktop from being covered by any other windows. It adds a "push-pin" button to your "top level" windows. FileBox eXtender enhances the Windows user interface in several powerful ways.
