The program's interface showed a list of directories on the left hand panel, and a list of the current directory's contents on the right hand panel. File Manager allowed a user to create, rename, move, print, copy, search for, and delete files and directories, as well as to set permissions such as archive, read-only, hidden or system, and to associate file types with programs. Also available were tools to label and format disks, manage folders for file sharing and to connect and disconnect from a network drive. On Windows NT systems it was also possible to set ACLs on files and folders on NTFS partitions through the shell32 security configuration dialog. On NTFS drives, individual files or entire folders could be compressed or expanded. The Windows NT version of File Manager allows users to change directory, file, local, network and user permissions. From Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 onward, File Manager was superseded by Windows Explorer. However, the WINFILE.EXEprogram file was still included with Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows Me, and Windows NT 4.0. The last 32-bit WINFILE.EXE build was distributed as part of Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 6a. The last 16-bit WINFILE.EXE build was distributed as part of Windows Me operating system. Chris Guzak was the shell developer on the Windows 3.1 team responsible for File Manager. The source was released on GitHub in 2018 with an MIT license by Microsoft.
Versions
16-bit OS/2 and Windows 3.x
File Manager was included in OS/2 versions 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3. The name of the executable was PMFILE.EXE. The original version of File Manager was a 16-bit program that supported the 8.3 file names that were in use at the time. It did not support the extended file names that became available in Windows 95 – including long file names and file names containing spaces. Instead, it would display only the first six characters followed by a tilde character and a number, usually 1. More numbers were added after the tilde if more than one file name with the same initial characters existed in the same directory. The 16-bit version distributed with Windows 3.1x and Windows for Workgroups 3.1x installations had a Y2K issue due to lexicographic correlation between date representation and the ASCII character set; colons and semicolons replaced what should have been '2000'. Microsoft issued corrected binaries for all Windows 3.1x environments.
Windows NT
File Manager was rewritten as a 32-bit program for Windows NT. This new version correctly handled long file names in addition to NTFS file systems. It was included with Windows NT 3.1, 3.5, 3.51, and 4.0.
Windows 10
On April 6, 2018, Microsoft released binaries and the source code, licensed under the MIT License, for an improved version of File Manager able to be run on Windows 10. This version included changes such as the ability to compile in modern versions of Visual Studio, the ability to compile as a 64-bit application, and numerous usability improvements. Microsoft also released this app in the Microsoft Storefor free in late January 2019.