ContextEdit gives you control over the context menu commands (i.e., the commands that appear when you right-click on an object in Windows Explorer) available in your system. Windows Explorer gives you some control over this via its View | Options | File Types command. ContextEdit lets you do things that Windows Explorer does not, including:
?Disabling shell commands without deleting them entirely.
?Enabling and disabling Context Menu Handlers.
?Edit, create, and/or remove commands that are associated directly with a file extension instead of a named file type.
?Repair "broken" file associations in which an extension is linked to a master file type that does not exist.
?Overcoming certain bugs in Windows Explorer when editing commands via View | Folder Options | File Types
Since this program lets you modify aspects of your system's behavior that Windows normally does not, it's a good idea to read the About File Associations topic to get a better understanding of what information this program exposes to you and why.
ContextEdit's main dialog is divided into three sections:
The File Type list
The Shell Commands list
The Context Menu Handers list
ContextEdit copyright ?2001 Ziff-Davis Media, Inc.
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